Mechanical Efficiency and Quality Control Preliminary Analysis of Incompletely Bonded Wood-Based Sandwich Panels
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Panels Sampled and Tests Performed
2.2. Tensile Test with Load Perpendicular to the Skins
- ft —Tensile strength perpendicular to the skins (N/mm2);
- Fu —Ultimate load recorded in the test (N);
- B —Square cross-section width (mm) of the specimen.
2.3. Shear Test with Load Parallel to the Longitudinal Direction of the Panel
- Two of these specimens, “A” specimens, Figure 3a, were tested directly, and these had skins bonded to the core. Each pair were fully bonded to three steel plates using a PUR 1C (one-component) adhesive, forming a test set, Figure 4a. The glue was applied on the exterior surface of the skin and pressed until the adhesive cured;
- In another two specimens of each panel, “B” specimens, Figure 3b, the skins were eliminated while removing as little core as possible, reducing the thickness of the foam by around 4 mm. Both foam specimens were then also glued directly to three steel plates to form a test set, Figure 4b. The same PUR 1C adhesive and gluing procedure applied to the “A” specimens were used.
- Finally, an additional set of two specimens per panel, “C” specimens, Figure 3c, were tested in one of the panel types. These were analogous to the corresponding “A” elements but with the thickness of the faces reduced to 3 mm.
- The “A” specimens test assesses the shear performance of the sandwich set, including the performance of the foam core and the factory-produced adhesive bond of the skins to the core;
- The “B” specimens test assesses the shear mechanical performance of the core foam when fully glued, which is assumed to be the shear behavior for fully glued sandwich panels;
- The “C” specimens test is similar to that for the “A” specimens. It is performed in order to evaluate the importance of the thickness of the faces in the results, using only one panel type as a reference, as mentioned before.
- G—Transversal modulus of elasticity (N/mm2)
- fv—Shear strength (N/mm2)
- tc—Core thickness (mm)
- bc—Specimen width (mm)
- lc—Specimen length (mm)
- k—Test deformation-load rate (mm/N)
- Fu—Test ultimate load (N)
2.4. Shear Efficiency Coefficients Definition
- ξgG—Efficiency coefficient due to the adhesive bonding performance for the transversal modulus of elasticity. Varying from 0, no efficiency, to 1, full efficiency, in which the sandwich specimen has the same shear properties as the core foam.
- ξgτ—Efficiency coefficient due to adhesive bonding performance for shear strength. This varies from 0 to 1, the latter of which corresponds to full efficiency.
- Geff—Effective transversal modulus of elasticity values obtained in the “A” specimen tests. This includes the shear performance of the core and the effect of the bonding.
- G—Transversal modulus of elasticity of the core obtained in the “B” specimen tests. This corresponds to the expected shear behavior of the fully glued sandwich panels.
- fv,eff—Effective shear strength values obtained in the “A” specimen tests. This corresponds to the shear performance of the core, including the effect of the bonding.
- fv—Shear strength values of the core obtained in the “B” specimen tests. This corresponds to the expected shear performance of the fully glued sandwich panels.
3. Results and Discussion
3.1. Tensile Test with Load Perpendicular to the Skins
3.1.1. General Analysis
- The strength obtained in the tensile test is dependent on the material of the faces.
- The tensile test is not appropriate for quality control of bonding in a sandwich with faces of low surface soundness or internal cohesion, such as those using gypsum-fiber boards or cement-bonded wood-wool panels, due to the lower strength values obtained.
- The tensile test proved to be a suitable quality control method of bonding in panels with cohesive skins, such as wood or wood-based panels with high surface soundness and internal strength, as those manufactured with particleboard or solid wood. However, the tensile strength results present in general high variability (Table 2).
3.1.2. Regression Analysis
3.2. Shear Tests with Load Parallel to the Longitudinal Direction of the Panel
3.2.1. General Analysis
- the average GSP for the PB19-XPS-SB19 “A” specimens was low, around 40%, and these tests presented the lowest mechanical properties. All the specimens failed at the core-skin surface.
- the PB16-XPS-SB10 had incomplete but better GSP, at around 70%, showing decreased apparent shear properties, but in proportion, less than those observed in the PB19-XPS-SB19 tests. Only one test failed at the core-skin interface, while the other two tests failed in the foam.
3.2.2. Efficiency Analysis
- although locally, the linear models fit the experimental values, it is evident that they are not going to fit in the case of the lowest GSP values, as a progressively decreasing ξgG and ξgτ is expected when GSP is diminished, being 0 when GSP equals 0;
- the logarithmic model presents a good fit, except for GSP values very close to 0 or for the highest GSP values;
- the third-order polynomial model shows a slightly better R2 value than the logarithmic model, although it worsens once adjusted for the degree of freedom. The shape of the model is closer to the expected behavior, except, again, at very high and especially at low GSP values.
- ξgG = 1 or ξgτ = 1 for GSP = 100 in the logarithmic model;
- ξgG = 0 or ξgτ = 0 for GSP = 0 and ξgG = 1 or ξgτ = 1 for GSP = 100 in the third-order polynomial model.
4. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Panel Type a,b | Batch | Panels Sampled | Tensile Perpendicular Test | Shear Tests | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
No. Tests per Panel | Specimen Dimensions (mm) | No. Tests per Panel | Specimen Dimensions (mm) | |||
PB19-XPS40-SB19 | 1 | 4 | 3 | 100 × 100 | 1 b + 1 c + 1 d | 100 × 200 |
PB16-XPS50-SB10 | 2 | 3 | 3 | 68 × 68 e | 1 b + 1 c | 75 e × 200 |
PB10-XPS40-GF10 | 1 | 3 | 3 | 100 × 100 | - | - |
PB10-XPS40-CW10 | 1 | 3 | 3 | 100 × 100 | - | - |
Panel Type | No. of Tests a | ft | GSP | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Average (N/mm2) | CoV (%) | Average (%) | CoV (%) | ||
PB19-XPS-SB19 | 12 | 0.21 | 46.5 | 46 | 37.1 |
PB16-XPS-SB10 | 9 | 0.25 | 53.3 | 69 | 30.3 |
PB10-XPS-GF10 | 8 b | 0.14 | 25.5 | 51 | 18.6 |
PB10-XPS-CW15 | 9 | 0.07 | 26.7 | - c | - |
Panel Type | No. of Tests | A Specimens a | B Specimens a | C Specimens a | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
G (N/mm2) | fv (N/mm2) | GSP (%) | G (N/mm2) | fv (N/mm2) | GSP (%) | G (N/mm2) | fv (N/mm2) | GSP (%) | ||
PB19-XPS-SB19 | 12 b | 3.98 [15.9%] | 0.17 [21.8%] | 38 [8.9%] d | 6.37 [11.7%] | 0.25 [4.2%] | 100 | 4.17 [10.6] | 0.17 [11.5%] | 41 [5.7%] |
PB16-XPS-SB10 | 6 c | 5.92 [9.3%] | 0.23 [13.7%] | 72 [26.8%] d | 7.22 [0.5%] | 0.26 [5.9%] | 100 | - | - | - |
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Luengo, E.; Arriaga, F.; Bobadilla, I.; Hermoso, E. Mechanical Efficiency and Quality Control Preliminary Analysis of Incompletely Bonded Wood-Based Sandwich Panels. Forests 2023, 14, 1074. https://doi.org/10.3390/f14061074
Luengo E, Arriaga F, Bobadilla I, Hermoso E. Mechanical Efficiency and Quality Control Preliminary Analysis of Incompletely Bonded Wood-Based Sandwich Panels. Forests. 2023; 14(6):1074. https://doi.org/10.3390/f14061074
Chicago/Turabian StyleLuengo, Emilio, Francisco Arriaga, Ignacio Bobadilla, and Eva Hermoso. 2023. "Mechanical Efficiency and Quality Control Preliminary Analysis of Incompletely Bonded Wood-Based Sandwich Panels" Forests 14, no. 6: 1074. https://doi.org/10.3390/f14061074
APA StyleLuengo, E., Arriaga, F., Bobadilla, I., & Hermoso, E. (2023). Mechanical Efficiency and Quality Control Preliminary Analysis of Incompletely Bonded Wood-Based Sandwich Panels. Forests, 14(6), 1074. https://doi.org/10.3390/f14061074