scholarly journals Study on the fiber orientation during compression molding of reinforced thermoplastic composites

Author(s):  
Jin-Woo Kim ◽  
Dong-Gi Lee
2020 ◽  
Vol 54 (23) ◽  
pp. 3343-3350
Author(s):  
Éric Léger ◽  
Benoit Landry ◽  
Gabriel LaPlante

An investigation into high flow compression molding for recycling thermoplastic discontinuous long fiber composites is presented. High flow recycled panels and conventional low flow baseline panels were produced with a large rectangular (2:1 aspect ratio) mold. Flow was induced in the recycled panels by stacking cut sections of conventionally produced baseline panels in the center of the mold cavity, representing 25% initial coverage. High flow compression molded panels were found to exhibit significantly higher than baseline tensile strength (+50%) and modulus (+31%) when tested in the direction parallel to flow. When tested in the direction perpendicular to flow, the opposite effect was found, with reductions in tensile strength (−42%) and modulus (−37%). However, when the average results of both directions are compared to baseline, no significant difference was found between the recycled and baseline panels. This severe anisotropic redistribution of mechanical properties suggests chip orientation is affected by flow. Additionally, micrographic analysis revealed that high flow molding induces intra-ply chip shearing and a reduction in resin rich regions within panels. Baseline panels also exhibited in-plane anisotropy, despite initial random distribution of chips and no or near no flow induced during molding. In this case, mechanical properties favored the direction perpendicular to that of the recycled panels.


2017 ◽  
Vol 52 (13) ◽  
pp. 1781-1797 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bhisham N Sharma ◽  
Diwakar Naragani ◽  
Ba Nghiep Nguyen ◽  
Charles L Tucker ◽  
Michael D Sangid

We present a detailed methodology for experimental measurement of fiber orientation distribution in injection-molded discontinuous fiber composites using the method of ellipses on two-dimensional cross sections. Best practices to avoid biases occurring during surface preparation and optical imaging of carbon-fiber-reinforced thermoplastics are discussed. A marker-based watershed transform routine for efficient image segmentation and the separation of touching fiber ellipses is developed. The sensitivity of the averaged orientation tensor to the image sample size is studied for the case of long-fiber thermoplastics. A Mori–Tanaka implementation of the Eshelby model is then employed to quantify the sensitivity of elastic stiffness predictions to biases in the fiber orientation distribution measurements.


2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Thanh Binh Nguyen Thi ◽  
Atsushi Yokoyama ◽  
Senji Hamanaka ◽  
Katsuhisa Yamashita ◽  
Chisato Nonomura

Author(s):  
Hyunchul Ahn ◽  
Taejoon Park ◽  
Yumeng Li ◽  
Sang Young Yeo ◽  
Farhang Pourboghrat

Abstract Thermo-hydroforming (THF) process is a single-step process for thermoplastic composite forming, which has a great advantage in terms of the process time and mass production potential as compared to conventional processes. However, with THF processes, winkles and deformations are easily generated due to the process characteristics and process parameters. In this study, the matrix material was examined by considering viscoelasticity and changes in formability according to the forming speed. A THF analysis was performed based on the preferred fiber orientation (PFO) analysis model, which considers the viscoelasticity of the matrix. The deformation change and molding possibility were examined according to various forming speeds. The viscoelastic PFO model showed better analysis efficiency and stability than the primitive PFO model. This analysis will help improve the process of forming thermoplastic composites.


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