liquid composite molding
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Author(s):  
Dong-Cheol Park ◽  
Yun-Hae Kim ◽  
Soo-Jeong Park ◽  
Do-Hoon Shin ◽  
TianYu Yu

Abstract Permeability is a critical parameter not only in flow simulation analysis but also in liquid composite molding (LCM) process. When a liquid resin is infused into a dry preform, the impregnation is mainly characterized by the permeability. The permeability of a dry preform can be obtained through theoretical and experimental methods. In the theoretical estimation of permeability, the effects of fiber arrangement as well as fabric type and form for various types of preforms are not sufficiently reflected in the calculation. Thus, there is a gap between the theoretical and experimental permeability. Recently, experimental determination has been gaining considerable attention as a mean to obtain accurate permeability values; however, it requires a number of trials. In this study, the permeability of the Hexforce G0926 5HS (5-harness satin) carbon fabric preform is estimated using representative theoretical prediction models, the Gebart and Kozeny–Carman equations. In addition to the Kozeny–Carman permeability (using the Kozeny constant values from literature), the Kozeny constant obtained through experiments was used to obtain a modified Kozeny–Carman permeability. All three calculated permeabilities were compared and verified with the fabric manufacturer’s reference value. The results showed that the modified Kozeny–Carman permeability using the experimentally determined Kozeny constant was closest to the reference value at 57% fiber volume fraction. Further, the predicted permeability was compared with other experimental permeability values from literature over the 40%–65% range of fiber volume fraction. We found that the modified Kozeny–Carman permeability once again came closest to the literature values. Finally, an optimized fitting equation was proposed to replace the Kozeny–Carman equation for predicting the permeability of Hexforce G0926 5HS carbon fabric over the 40%–65% fiber volume fraction range.


Polymers ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 14 (1) ◽  
pp. 87
Author(s):  
Ivan V. Terekhov ◽  
Evgeniy M. Chistyakov

Binders, or tackifiers, have become widespread in the production of new composites materials by liquid composite molding (LCM) techniques due to their ability to stabilize preforms during laying-up and impregnation, as well as to improve fracture toughness of the obtained composites, which is very important in aviation, automotive, ship manufacturing, etc. Furthermore, they can be used in modern methods of automatic laying of dry fibers into preforms, which significantly reduces the labor cost of the manufacturing process. In this article, we review the existing research from the 1960s of the 20th century to the present days in the field of creation and properties of binders used to bond various layers of preforms in the manufacturing of composite materials by LCM methods to summarize and synthesize knowledge on these issues. Different binders based on epoxy, polyester, and a number of other resins compatible with the corresponding polymer matrices are considered in the article. The influence of binders on the preforming process, various properties of obtained preforms, including compaction, stability, and permeability, as well as the main characteristics of composite materials obtained by various LCM methods and the advantages and disadvantages of this technology have been also highlighted.


2021 ◽  
Vol 8 ◽  
Author(s):  
Julian Seuffert ◽  
Lars Bittrich ◽  
Leonardo Cardoso de Oliveira ◽  
Axel Spickenheuer ◽  
Luise Kärger

To manufacture a high-performance structure made of continuous fiber reinforced plastics, Liquid Composite Molding processes are used, where a liquid resin infiltrates the dry fibers. For a good infiltration quality without dry spots, it is important to predict the resin flow correctly. Knowledge of the local permeability is an essential precondition for mold-filling simulations. In our approach, the intra-bundle permeability parallel and transverse to the fibers is characterized via periodic fluid dynamic simulations of micro-scale volume elements (VE). We evaluate and compare two approaches: First, an approach to generate VEs based on a statistical distribution of the fibers and fiber diameters. Second, an approach based on micrograph images of samples manufactured with Tailored Fiber Placement (TFP) using the measured fiber distribution. The micrograph images show a higher heterogeneity of the distribution than the statistically generated VEs, which is characterized by large resin areas. This heterogeneity leads to a significantly different permeability compared to the stochastic approach. In conclusion, a pure stochastic approach needs to contain the large heterogeneity of the fiber distribution to predict correct permeability values.


Materials ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 14 (20) ◽  
pp. 6087
Author(s):  
Yavuz Caydamli ◽  
Klaus Heudorfer ◽  
Jens Take ◽  
Filip Podjaski ◽  
Peter Middendorf ◽  
...  

In this study, optically transparent glass fiber-reinforced polymers (tGFRPs) were produced using a thermoset matrix and an E-glass fabric. In situ polymerization was combined with liquid composite molding (LCM) techniques both in a resin transfer molding (RTM) mold and a lite-RTM (L-RTM) setup between two glass plates. The RTM specimens were used for mechanical characterization while the L-RTM samples were used for transmittance measurements. Optimization in terms of the number of glass fabric layers, the overall degree of transparency of the composite, and the mechanical properties was carried out and allowed for the realization of high mechanical strength and high-transparency tGFRPs. An outstanding degree of infiltration was achieved maintaining up to 75% transmittance even when using 29 layers of E-glass fabric, corresponding to 50 v. % fiber, using an L-RTM setup. RTM specimens with 44 v. % fiber yielded a tensile strength of 435.2 ± 17.6 MPa, and an E-Modulus of 24.3 ± 0.7 GPa.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
DAVID MAY ◽  
ELENA SYERKO ◽  
TIM SCHMIDT ◽  
CHRISTOPHE BINETRUY ◽  
LUISA ROCHA DA SILVA ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT For fast and complete impregnation in Liquid Composite Molding, knowledge about the permeability of the fibrous reinforcement is required. While development of experimental methods continues, a parallel benchmark effort to numerically characterize permeability is being pursued. The approach was to send out the images of a real fibrous microstructure to a number of participants, in order for them to apply their methods for virtual permeability prediction. Via resin transfer molding a plate was manufactured, using the glass woven fabric Hexcel 01102 (295 g/m²) at a fiber volume content of 54% and a thermoset resin. From this plate, a specimen was scanned using a 3D x-ray microscope at a scan size of 1000 x 1000 x 1000 μm³ and a resolution of 0.521 μm³ per voxel. The sample extracted for the simulations with a size of 523 x 65 x 507 μm³ contains about 400 fibers of a single tow. It revealed a variation of filament diameters between 7.5-9.3 μm and a fiber volume content in average of 56.46% with a variation of 54 - 59% in the individual 2D-slices transverse to the fiber direction. The image segmentation was performed by 2D-slices, to which a Hough transform was applied to detect fiber centers and cross-sections. Then fiber paths were tracked through-out the slices by the closest neighbor algorithm. Finally, fiber paths were smoothened by means of the local regression using weighted linear least squares and a 1st degree polynomial model. The participants received a stack of 973 segmented (binary) 2D-images and a corresponding segmented 3D volume raw-file. They were asked to calculate the full permeability tensor components and fill out a detailed questionnaire including questions e.g. on applied flow models and conditions, numerical discretization and approximation methods, fluid properties etc. The received results scatter considerably over two orders of magnitude, although the participants were provided an already segmented image structure, thus eliminating from the beginning a significant source of variation that could have come from image processing. Model size, meshing and many other sources of variation were identified, allowing further specification of the guidelines for the next step.


2021 ◽  
Vol 900 ◽  
pp. 3-8
Author(s):  
Ahmed Ouezgan ◽  
Said Adima ◽  
Aziz Maziri ◽  
El Hassan Mallil ◽  
Jamal Echaabi

Compression resin transfer molding using inflatable seals is a new variant of LCM (“Liquid composite molding”) processes, which uses the inflatable seals to compress the fiber reinforcements and drive the resin to impregnate the fabric preform, resulting to fill the entire mold cavity. During resin injection, the preform is relaxed. Consequently, the resin enters easily and quickly into the mold cavity. After, the necessary resin is injected into the mold cavity, the compression stage takes place, in a stepwise manner, by swelling the inflatable seals. The objective of this paper is to present this new process and study the effect of the number of inflatable seals on the filling time.


2021 ◽  
Vol 94 ◽  
pp. 388-402
Author(s):  
Xiaokang Guo ◽  
Runcong Liu ◽  
Jiang Wang ◽  
Sansan Shuai ◽  
Degan Xiong ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Vitantonio Esperto ◽  
Antonio Gambardella ◽  
Germana Pasquino ◽  
Fausto Tucci ◽  
Massimo Durante ◽  
...  

In recent years, the concepts of industry 4.0 are widely spreading in many different sectors, from agriculture to home automation, from transportation systems to manufacturing processes. One of the pillars of this concept is related to the use of robotic cells. The focus of the present work is the robotic automated layup of dry fibrous preforms to be employed in liquid composite molding (LCM) processes. In particular, the article describes a software tool developed to simulate the automated placement and layup of fiber fabrics and tissues on complex shape molds by means of a robotic system. The tool has been coded in Matlab language. An end-effector has been appositely designed for the fiber layup and it has been included in the model. The simulation provides as output the path generation and the configuration of the robotic arm and of end effector along the entire layup process. The implemented code has been compared with the commercial software RoboDK.


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