This is a continuation-in-part of U.S. Ser. No. 11/956,216 filed 13 Dec. 2007, now U.S. Pat. No. 8,343,298.
Lightweight composite materials hold great promise for the aircraft industry. Fiber composites provide a significant improvement in specific strength and stiffness over conventional metal alloys. Better specific strength and stiffness translates into weight savings, which translates into fuel savings and lower operating costs. Additionally, composites do not corrode like aluminum, and they are more resistant to fatigue.
Composite elements such as skins, stiffeners, frames and spars are joined together to form major components such as wings, fuselage and empennage. The composite elements may be bonded together with polymeric adhesive. In theory, adhesive bonds alone have sufficient strength and integrity to support loading of these components. Therefore, adhesive bonds should be able to greatly reduce the number of metal fasteners in the major components.
In practice, however, certain federal aviation regulations require substantiation that a bonded joint between any two primary structural components will carry a specified load with a maximum disbond (that is, where an entire bond line is missing). One solution to this lack of confidence in adhesively bonded joints has been to add metal fasteners. If an adhesively bonded joint fails, a metal fastener would continue holding the joint together.
The use of metal fasteners adds weight to aircraft components. The use of metal fasteners with composite structures also increases the time, cost and complexity of fabrication. High precision machines and complex procedures are used to drill through composite structures.
Weight is also added by plies of composite that are added around the drilled holes to satisfy requirements for by-pass bearing loads. The additional plies also increase cost of an aircraft. The presence of fastener holes also forces the selection of composite ply layup orientations that reduce the strength of panels and bonded joints (as compared to optimally designed panels and joints without fasteners).
It is believed that adhesive bonds alone, if properly designed, prepared and controlled, have sufficient strength and integrity to bond primary structures together. However, data proving consistency and reliability is unavailable, and current inspection techniques are inadequate to establish confidence in adhesive bonds.
According to an embodiment herein, an aircraft article comprises first and second aircraft structures bonded together with an adhesive including strain-sensitive magnetostrictive material. The material has a magnetomechanical coefficient greater than e−5.
According to another embodiment herein, an airframe comprises a plurality of structures bonded together with an adhesive. The adhesive includes magnetostrictive material having a magnetomechanical coefficient greater than e−5.
According to another embodiment herein, a method comprises bonding first and second aircraft structures together with an adhesive including strain-sensitive magnetostrictive material. The material has a magnetomechanical coefficient greater than e−5.
These features and functions may be achieved independently in various embodiments or may be combined in other embodiments. Further details of the embodiments can be seen with reference to the following description and drawings.
Reference is made to
The adhesive 130 may be a thermosetting polymer or a thermoplastic polymer. The adhesive 130 may contain additional materials such as fiber mats (scrim) or other fillers. The adhesive 130 may form a bond line, a fillet, a sealant, a covering on a panel, etc., or it may bridge a bonded joint. The adhesive 130 may be used for bonding primary or non-primary structures.
The adhesive 130 includes strain-sensitive magnetostrictive material. Magnetostriction is a property of ferromagnetic materials that causes the ferromagnetic materials to change their shape when subjected to a magnetic field. Conversely, subjecting magnetostrictive material to any level of physical strain (down to a few microstrains or better) produces a measurable change in its magnetization.
The level of strain in the adhesive 130 is used as an indicator of the strength of adhesion between the adhesive 130 and the structures 110 and 120. Strain in the adhesive 130 develops as the result of chemical and physical changes occurring during polymerization and as the result of coefficient of thermal expansion differences between the adhesive 130 and the structures 110 and 120. The strain in the adhesive 130 can be predicted by finite element analysis. If the bonded joint is without irregularities, the strain map of the joint should match the finite element analysis. Higher levels of adhesive strain should exist in regions of an adhesive 130 with high bond strength due to the stress being applied to the adhesive 130 through its strong (load-carrying) connection to the structures 110 and 120. Lower levels of adhesive strain (as compared to the finite element analysis) will appear in areas within the structure-adhesive interfaces that are in direct contact, but not able to transfer the load without dimensional change (i.e., through a lower modulus material). This will result in a localized measurable difference in the magnetic properties between the localized area and any of a) the strains at other areas, b) computed or expected strains, c) the same area at another time, and d) the same area after damage. Lower strain levels indicate the presence or predisposition for irregularities such as disbonds, delaminations, and localized cavitation (on the order of 10-100 microns).
By measuring localized differences in magnetic properties, lower levels of strain can be located. For instance, “kissing disbonds” occur where the adhesive 130 and structure surfaces are in contact, but load is not transferred across the interface under loading of the joint. Kissing disbonds may occur due to the presence of low modulus regions of contaminants such as siloxane release agents.
The magnetostrictive material has a small magnetostriction coefficient on the order of 10 ppm, but a magnetomechanical coefficient greater than e−5. One such material is Metglas® 2605 magnetic alloy, which has a magnetomechanical coefficient of 4e−5 and a magnetostrictive coefficient of 40 ppm. Properties of the magnetostrictive material are not selected to achieve maximum strains by applying a large magnetic field. Rather, the properties of the magnetostrictive material are selected to use the inverse effect—the Villari effect, which is the effect of strain on the magnetization of the material. The magnetic properties, including the magnetic permeability, change when under mechanical strain. The strain is transferred to the magnetostrictive material in places where a bond is good, but not in places having an irregularity such as a void or disbond. Those places having an irregularity will have a different permeability. This change in permeability may be measured by applying a small magnetic bias field and then measuring the magnetic field in another nearby location. The magnitude of this measured field will be affected by the permeability of the material in the joint because the magnetic lines of flux from the bias field will travel through the nearby materials. Because the affect may be quite weak, a relatively large magnetomechanical coefficient (at least e−5) is desirable. Advantageously, relatively small magnetic fields are applied, and relatively small strains are measured.
Materials such as Terfenol-D and Galfenol may be used in the adhesive 130, but they require a significantly larger bias magnetic field in order to have a significant Villari effect. Consider Terfenol-D, which has a magnetostriction coefficient greater than 1000 ppm and a magnetomechanical coefficient of 1.6e−7. To achieve the Villari effect, a bias magnetic field of 250 Oersted would be applied in contrast to a bias field of 1 Oersted for Metglas® 2605 magnetic alloy.
Thickness of the adhesive 130 will depend upon the structures being bonded. For instance, a bond line may have a thickness of about 10 mils.
The magnetostrictive material may have a form ranging from nanoparticles to films. Particles such as flakes, fiber shapes and coated fibers typically have higher coupling and therefore are desirable. Particle size and film thickness may be determined by the size and thickness limits allowed by the adhesive 130. However, particle dimensions should be small enough to minimize adverse affects on adhesive structural properties. Still, there is a wide range of useful particle dimensions depending on the shape, ranging from nanometers to microns. Magnetostrictive film thicknesses may range from nanometers to a few microns.
Proportion of the magnetostrictive material to adhesive 130 may be in the range of 0.1% to 30% by volume. However, lower proportions in the range of 0.1% to 1% volume are desirable for adhesive mechanical performance and lower weight.
In some embodiments, the magnetostrictive material (e.g., particles) may be applied to an entire bonded joint. In other embodiments, there might be interest in only a region of the adhesive, whereby the magnetostrictive material is applied only to that region. For example, instead of applying magnetostrictive material to an entire bond line, the magnetostrictive material is applied only to those regions where strains are high and where cavitation and debonding are likely to occur. For typical lap joint configurations, one such region is the area under or adjacent to the adhesive fillet.
Strain in a bonded joint causes strain in the magnetostrictive material. This strain, in turn, produces measurable changes in the magnetization of the magnetostrictive material.
A magnetic sensor may be used to detect a change in strain in the adhesive 130 by measuring changes in magnetization of the magnetostrictive material. The magnetic sensor may include, for example, a magnetic field generating coil (“driving” coil). A non-contacting driving coil operating either at DC or an alternating frequency can create an external magnetic field over the adhesive 130 and it can set the magnetization of the magnetostrictive material. The magnetic sensor may further include an instrument for measuring the resulting magnetic field, which is affected by the magnetostrictive material. The measuring device may include, for example, another coil (a “sensing” coil) or a giant magneto resistance sensor. The magnetization of the magnetostrictive material is sensed and compared to base line data (e.g., a previous measurement of the magnetization, or an expected value representing a good bond). For instance, a driving magnetic coil produces an external magnetic field. The magnetization of the particles changes when the particles are subjected to this external magnetic field. The external magnetic field also produces an electric voltage in the sensing coil. The voltage in the sensing coil changes when the magnetization of the particles change, The magnetic field and this electric voltage are affected by strain on the magnetostrictive material. The electric voltage can be measured. The driving and sensing magnetic coils can be very small in order to have a response to only a small area of a bond. The sensor can scan over the bond to inspect the bond. In some embodiments, the sensor may include an array of driving and sensing coils to produce an image of the bond. The sensor's field of view would be chosen to match the desired resolution (how small of an area to detect).
An advantage of incorporating strain sensitive magnetostrictive material in adhesive is that areas of high and low adhesive strains in the adhesive can be sensed and measured nondestructively. Thus, the strains can be sensed and measured without harming or significantly disassembling the structures 110 and 120 or the adhesive 130.
Another advantage of incorporating strain sensitive magnetostrictive material in adhesive is that areas of weak bonds (e.g., bonds that are weakened due to the presence of contaminants) can be detected. In contrast, conventional nondestructive inspection such as ultrasonic inspection can only detect disbonds, and relatively large voids, bubbles and defects in bond lines, and cannot supply information about the strength of the bond.
Strain can be sensed without having to attach wires to the structures 110 and 120, and without having wires stick out of the structures 110 and 120 or the adhesive 130. Wires sticking out the adhesive 130 are undesirable as they would create a pathway for moisture or fluids from the atmosphere surrounding the joint to move into the interior of the adhesive and thereby increase the chances for premature joint failure.
The bonding of the structures 110 and 120 is not limited to any particular method.
Reference is now made to
For an adhesive such as a thermoplastic polymer, the magnetostrictive particles can be added during manufacture of the thermoplastic polymer or mixed in by standard compounding and extrusion techniques after the thermoplastic polymer is softened (block 210). The structures are then bonded together with the polymer (block 220). For example, the structures are laid up, and a film of thermoplastic polymer is inserted between the structures\. The thermoplastic polymer is fused, during which the thermoplastic polymer is heated so it flows and makes intimate contact with the surfaces of the structures, and then allowed to cool so it hardens.
Reference is now made to
At block 320, the structures and the resin-infiltrated scrim are laid up. As a first example, the scrim is placed between the surfaces to be bonded. As a second example, the scrim is placed adjacent to the edges of a bonded doubler or part in the region where an adhesive fillet typically forms and where high bond stresses initially develop.
At block 330, the resin is polymerized or fused. The resulting polymeric adhesive contains the scrim. Since the scrim might be more effectively coupled to the adhesive than discrete particles, the scrim might be better able to transfer strain to the magnetostrictive material and result in a more sensitive use of a given weight of magnetostrictive material.
Reference is now made to
At block 420, the fillet is coated with magnetostrictive particles or a film. The coating may result from the layup of the joint, or it may be applied by a separate operation. Alternatively, a strip of adhesive containing magnetostrictive material may be applied and co-cured adjacent to the perimeter of a bonded doubler or joint in the area where the adhesive fillet will form. Unloaded adhesive bleeding out from the bond line could flow over the surrounding loaded strip of adhesive and bond the two together. A shaped strip of adhesive containing magnetostrictive material may also be incorporated as a fillet or stress minimizing taper.
A method herein is not limited to applying magnetostrictive material to an entire bond. Magnetostrictive material may be applied only to a specific region. Particles could be formed as a pattern on a surface using standard masking or etching techniques. For example, a surface is masked (e.g., using a photomask), magnetostrictive material is deposited, and then the mask is removed.
A film adhesive may be applied in specific regions. A liquid adhesive or coating of magnetostrictive particles may be applied via spraying or rolling or by draw-down or by transfer coating. A film of magnetostrictive material (e.g., originally created via roll-coating or sputtering or electroplating) may also be incorporated in the layup so long as the film has adequate integrity and the surfaces themselves bond well to the other materials within or surrounding the joint. For example a magnetostrictive film could be formed along with the adhesive fillet to create a way of intimately interrogating the fillet. A magnetostrictive film could be used to coat the carbon fibers of a pre-preg, which would allow excess strain or changes to strain in the composite to be sensed.
A method herein is not limited to the manufacturing phase. In some embodiments, existing joints could be retro-fitted or repaired. For example, a retrofit or repair might include applying a strip adhesive containing magnetostrictive particles to a bonded joint, or applying an adhesive strip containing a scrim coated with a magnetostrictive film over fillets surrounding a bonded joint.
A method herein is not necessarily limited to polymeric adhesives. A method according to an embodiment of the present invention may be applied to brazed metal joints, and adhesives that contain non-polymer materials such as fibers, spheres, fillers, etc.
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Reference is now made to
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 11956216 | Dec 2007 | US |
Child | 13732270 | US |