Wj. Padgett et al., WEIBULL ANALYSIS OF THE STRENGTH OF CARBON-FIBERS USING LINEAR AND POWER-LAW MODELS FOR THE LENGTH EFFECT, Journal of composite materials, 29(14), 1995, pp. 1873-1884
The single-filament test measurements for strength of carbon fibers ob
tained by Bader and Priest [5] are analyzed using a broader class of W
eibull models with the scale parameter assumed to be a function of fib
er gauge length. Two specific models are proposed for the fiber gauge
length effect on tensile strength: The power law model and a linear mo
del. The methods of maximum likelihood estimation and Weibull plots pr
ovide tools for the parameter estimation and assessment of the fitted
models. In particular, the models provide excellent prediction of the
fiber strength distributions at longer gauge lengths not tested, but i
llustrate that extrapolation to very short gauge lengths yield larger
predicted fiber strengths than those actually observed experimentally,
and extrapolation to very long gauge lengths yield smaller predicted
fiber strength than observed experimentally. Analysis of the Bader-Pri
est data using the proposed models supports the observed ''end effects
'' (or ''clamp effects'') for short gauge lengths studied initially by
Phoenix and Sexsmith [3] and reported also by Stoner, Edie and Durham
[4].