Introduction
The use of composites in automotive, aircraft, marine, military, and other equipment requires composites to be designed for predictable behavior both under normal loads and under extreme conditions. For example, energy absorption and failure of composite automotive body panels as they are crushed help protect the vehicle’s occupants in an accident. A rectangular cross-section cone designed for energy absorption upon impact is shown in Figure 1. Most of the composite cone crushes during the experiment to stop the test sled. Figure 1 also shows a small portion of the cone remaining intact at the end of the experiment.

The crushing behavior of composites is a complex finite element analysis problem that generally cannot be described by conventional failure mechanisms designed to simulate metal components. The material layers, reinforcements, and bonding between layers in a composite each have different failure characteristics. The load-carrying capacity of the composite is controlled by localized buckling, shearing, delamination, and eventual failure of the composite material in the area being crushed. While a material is crushed, it continues to transmit stress in a zone of damage called the crush front or crush zone, immediately adjacent to the point of impact between the composite and the object that is crushing it. Not all materials can be crushed. Physical testing is required to determine whether a material can be crushed and the characteristics of its behavior while being crushed.
The CZone for Abaqus capability integrates material, element, and contact algorithms to simulate continuous crushing behavior. Figure 2 compares sled acceleration histories for the experiment associated with Figure 1. The experimental and simulation acceleration curves match well, with the simulation results smoother than the experimental data. Conventional material damage and element failure mechanisms for finite element analysis tend to produce noisy acceleration and stress solutions for crushing phenomena, due to sequences of element failure followed by a short interval of no contact until additional elements of the crushing body are impacted. Conventional approaches typically underestimate energy absorption associated with crushing, unlike the CZone approach.
