Abstract: | Too often adhesive thickness, adherend thickness and other geometric factors are not explicitly considered in adhesive joint design. This study includes experimental and computational research exploring the means of enhancing the engineering design process for adhesive lap joints to include such effects. It clearly demon-strated that both the cleavage stresses and the shear stresses, near the bond termini, play important roles in lap 'shear' joint failure. Finite Element and Fracture Mechanics analyses were used to examine the energy release rate applied to growth of cracks in adhesive lap joints. Lap joints with similar geometries to those analyzed were designed, fabricated and tested. In a separate set of experiments the bond termini were constrained in the direction normal to the uniaxial loading. If the strength of lap shear joints is dominated by the adhesive shear strength, then constraining the lateral motion of the bond termini should have little or no effect on the overall shear strength of the adhesive joint. This work clearly demonstrates that this is not the case. If cleavage stresses are important in lap joints then constraining the bond termini, in a direction normal to the bond area, should have a commensurate effect on the overall strength of the lap joint. None of the ASTM standardized 'lap shear tests' provide any insight into this premise. This paper also presents analyses and experimental results for lap joints to which several methods of lateral constraint were applied near the bond termini. The analytical and numerical methods described and used for explaining and predicting such effects might be a useful adhesive joint design tool. |