Open Access Publications
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Open access publications by faculty, staff, postdocs, and graduate students from the Center for Composite Materials.
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Browsing Open Access Publications by Subject "advanced materials and processing"
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Item A High-Consolidation Electron Beam-Curing Process for Manufacturing Three-Dimensional Advanced Thermoset Composites(Journal of Manufacturing Science and Engineering, 2022-07-27) Rizzolo, Robert H.; Walczyk, Daniel F.; Montoney, Daniel; Simacek, Pavel; Mahbub, Md RashefThis paper describes the application of a new manufacturing process for low-cost and rapid consolidation and curing of advanced thermoset composites that avoids the use of expensive prepreg, autoclaving, and thermally induced curing. The process, called VIPE, uses a novel tooling design that combines vacuum infusion (VI) of a dry preform with resin, a rigidly backed pressure focusing layer (P) made of an elastomer to consolidate the wet preform with uniform pressure, and high-energy electron beam curing (E). A VIPE tool is engineered and fabricated to manufacture 3D laminate bicycle seats composed of woven carbon fiber textile and an electron beam-curable epoxy acrylate. Details of the tooling design discussed include computational fluid dynamics (CFD) simulation of the vacuum infusion, iterative structural finite element analysis (FEA) to synthesize the pressure focusing layer (PFL), structural FEA to design the top mold made of a composite sandwich structure for electron beam transparency, and Monte Carlo electron absorption simulations to specify the e-beam energy level. Ten parts are fabricated using the matched tool (bottom aluminum mold covered with silicone layer and top mold with carbon/epoxy skins separated by foam core) after the dry textile preform contained within is infused with resin, the tool halves are clamped under load, and a 3.0 MeV e-beam machine bombards the tool for less than 1 min. Part thickness, part stiffness, surface roughness, and fiber and void volume fractions measurements show that aerospace quality parts with low cycle times are achievable, although there is high variability due to the small number of replicates and need for process optimization.