Adali, Sarp.Drosopoulos, Georgios A.Sewnath, Kiren.2023-02-012023-02-0120212021https://researchspace.ukzn.ac.za/handle/10413/21311Masters Degree. University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban.Composite materials are known for exhibiting high specific stiffness, strength and light weight. Their properties can be optimized by designers for a specific application. They currently have many applications in various industries such as aerospace, automotive and building industries. Fibre reinforced polymer composites are a large portion of the composite material market. The use of such materials has many advantages. Recently, nanosized reinforcements such as carbon nanotubes and graphene nanoplatelets have also been used as filler materials in composites. Graphene is one of the strongest materials available today and exhibits excellent mechanical properties. The study presented here is an investigation into the buckling of a woven glass fibre and graphene nanoplatelet reinforced epoxy composite. A laminate analogy is utilised. The analytical equations governing these types of laminates are presented and incorporated into Matlab, a computer simulation software that makes use of matrix implementations. The programme is then used to investigate the effects of various design parameters on the buckling load, by generating 2D and 3D graphs. In this study, a laminate analogy is used for the woven glass fibres whereby undulation of the fibres is neglected, and the composite is regarded as an assembly of cross-ply laminates with woven fibres orientated at 90° to each other. The Halpin-Tsai equations are used to incorporate the graphene nanoplatelets into the epoxy matrix. The laminate that is investigated consists of 4 plies, each reinforced by woven glass fibres and graphene nanoplatelets. The laminate is symmetric about its midpoint, such that the two outer layers are identical, and the two middle layers are identical. Layer thicknesses are non-uniform and the reinforcements are distributed non-uniformly in the layers. The thickness ratio of the laminate is defined as the ratio of the total width of the outer layers to the entire laminate thickness. The governing equations of classical laminate theory for buckling of a simply-supported rectangular plate under biaxial loading are used to predict the critical buckling load of the laminate. The bending-twisting coupling terms are neglected. The results generated display the influence of various design parameters on the buckling load. The design parameters investigated are the woven glass fibre volume fraction, woven glass fibre orientation, woven glass fibre balancing coefficient, graphene platelet weight fraction, laminate thickness ratio and laminate aspect ratio. The results show that the graphene nanoplatelets have a greater effect on the buckling load than the woven glass fibres. High graphene content can obscure the effect of the woven fibre orientation and laminate aspect ratio on the buckling load. At low graphene contents, a more concentrated fibre distribution in a single direction (warp or weft) is preferred for the buckling load. At higher graphene content, a more evenly balanced distribution is preferred. Furthermore, for high thickness ratios, more focus must be placed in the reinforcements in the outer layer of the laminate for a cost-effective design.enCarbon nanotubes.Biaxial loading.Composite materials.Glass fibre.Buckling of woven fibre and graphene platelet reinforced nanocomposite laminates.Thesis