The present invention in general relates to fiber preforms for use in composite material molding process and a method of construction thereof.
Weight savings in the automotive, transportation, and logistics based industries has been a major focus in order to make more fuel-efficient vehicles both for ground and air transport. In order to achieve these weight savings, light weight composite materials have been introduced to take the place of metal structural and surface body components and panels. Composite materials are materials made from two or more constituent materials with significantly different physical or chemical properties, that when combined, produce a material with characteristics different from the individual components. The individual components remain separate and distinct within the finished structure. A composite material may be preferred for many reasons: common examples include materials which are stronger, lighter, or less expensive when compared to traditional materials.
Composite materials are engineered or naturally occurring materials made from two or more constituent materials with significantly different physical or chemical properties which remain separate and distinct at the macroscopic or microscopic scale within the finished structure. There are two categories of constituent materials: matrix and reinforcement. At least one portion of each type is required. The matrix material surrounds and supports the reinforcement materials by maintaining their relative positions. The reinforcements impart their special mechanical and physical properties to enhance the matrix properties. A synergism produces material properties unavailable from the individual constituent materials, while the wide variety of matrix and strengthening materials allows the designer of the product or structure to choose an optimum combination.
Commercially produced composites often use a polymer matrix material that is either a thermoplastic or thermoset resin. There are many different polymers available depending upon the starting raw ingredients which may be placed into several broad categories, each with numerous variations. Examples of the most common categories for categorizing polymers include polyester, vinyl ester, epoxy, phenolic, polyimide, polyamide, polypropylene, PEEK, and others.
The use of fiber and particulate inclusions to strengthen a matrix is well known to the art. Well established mechanisms for the strengthening include slowing and elongating the path of crack propagation through the matrix, as well as energy distribution associated with pulling a fiber free from the surrounding matrix material. In the context of sheet molding composition (SMC) formulations, bulk molding composition (BMC) formulations, and resin transfer molding (RTM); hereafter referred to collectively as “molding compositions,” fiber strengthening has traditionally involved usage of chopped glass fibers. There is a growing appreciation in the field of molding compositions that replacing in part, or all of the glass fiber in molding compositions with carbon fiber can provide improved component properties.
The use of carbon fibers in composites, sheet molding compositions, and resin transfer molding (RTM) results in formed components with a lower weight as compared to glass fiber reinforced materials. The weight savings achieved with carbon fiber reinforcement stems from the fact that carbon has a lower density than glass and produces stronger and stiffer parts at a given thickness.
Fiber-reinforced composite materials can be divided into two main categories normally referred to as short fiber-reinforced materials and continuous fiber-reinforced materials. Continuous reinforced materials often constitute a layered or laminated structure. The woven and continuous fiber styles are typically available in a variety of forms, being pre-impregnated with the given matrix (resin), dry, uni-directional tapes of various widths, plain weave, harness satins, braided, and stitched. Various methods have been developed to reduce the resin content of the composite material, by increasing the fiber content. Typically, composite materials may have a ratio that ranges from 60% resin and 40% fiber to a composite with 40% resin and 60% fiber content. The strength of a product formed with composites is greatly dependent on the ratio of resin to reinforcement material.
Tailored Fiber Placement (TFP) is a textile manufacturing technique in which fibrous material is arranged on another piece of base material and is fixed with an upper and lower stitching thread on the base material. The fiber material can be placed in curvilinear patterns of a multitude of shapes upon the base material. Layers of the fiber material may be built up to produce a two-dimensional fiber preform insert, which may be used as an insert for a molding process to create composite materials. Unfortunately, due to the tendency of such fiber preforms to be limp in their two-dimensional form, voids or wrinkles are formed when the two-dimensional preform is placed in the typically three-dimensional resin transfer mold. Voids and wrinkles in transfer molded parts significantly reduce strength and modulus of the final composite material, making such fiber preform inserts unfavorable in terms of production cost, increased scrappage, and diminished throughput. Additionally, the level of detail and accuracy required for stitching of such fiber preforms is high resulting in low throughputs and increased manufacturing time and costs.
Thus, there exists a need for fiber preforms with evenly distributed reinforcing fibers that avoid voids and wrinkles in subsequent composite molding processes while being easy and fast to manufacture at a high throughput and a low cost.
A fiber preform for use in a composite material molding process is provided that includes a fiber bundle containing reinforcing fibers. The fiber bundle arranged in parallel switchbacks forming a first layer of the fiber preform. The parallel switchbacks define a principal orientation. A roving is provided that contains reinforcing fibers in a coating. The roving forms stitches on the fiber bundle in a direction perpendicular to the switchbacks so the stitches join the fiber bundle to itself.
A method of forming such a fiber preform includes the fiber bundle in the parallel switchbacks being arranged to form the first layer of the fiber preform. The roving forms stitches on the fiber bundle in a direction perpendicular to the switchbacks to join the fiber bundle to itself.
The subject matter that is regarded as the invention is particularly pointed out and distinctly claimed in the claims at the conclusion of the specification. The foregoing and other objects, features, and advantages of the invention are apparent from the following detailed description taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings in which:
The present invention has utility as a fiber preform for use in a composite material molding process. Embodiments of the present invention provide fiber preforms of virtually any shape and size with selectively distributed reinforcing fibers. Furthermore, the fiber preforms of the present invention may be formed into three dimensional shapes prior to insertion in a mold for forming a composite component, thus, the resulting composite component quality and throughput are enhanced.
It is to be understood that in instances where a range of values are provided that the range is intended to encompass not only the end point values of the range but also intermediate values of the range as explicitly being included within the range and varying by the last significant figure of the range. By way of example, a recited range of from 1 to 4 is intended to include 1-2, 1-3, 2-4, 3-4, and 1-4.
As used herein, any reference to weight percent or by extension molecular weight of a polymer is based on weight average molecular weight.
As used herein, the term melting as used with respect to thermoplastic fibers or thread is intended to encompass both thermofusion of fibers such that a vestigial core structure of separate fibers is retained, as well as a complete melting of the fibers to obtain a homogenous thermoplastic matrix.
As used herein, the term perpendicular in the context stitching relative to a fiber bundle is defined as 90±16 degrees.
Referring now to
The fiber bundle 14 is made of comingled reinforcing fibers, such as those made of carbon, glass, aramid fibers, basalt fiber, or any combination thereof and optionally thermoplastic fibers which serve to provide a matrix in a composite material made of both reinforcing and matrix fibers. The fibers can also have functional uses that include conductive fiber, and optical fiber. The optional matrix fibers, being of a thermofusible nature may be formed from a thermoplastic material such as, for example, polypropylenes, polyamides, polyesters, polyether ether ketones, polybenzobisoxazoles, polyphenylene sulfide; block copolymers containing at least of one of the aforementioned constituting at least 40 percent by weight of the copolymer; and blends thereof. The thermoplastic fibers are appreciated to be recycled, virgin, or a blend thereof. The thermofusible thermoplastic matrix fibers have a first melting temperature at which point the solid thermoplastic material melts to a liquid state. The reinforcing fibers may also be of a material that is thermofusible provided the thermofusion of the reinforcing fibers occurs at a temperature which is higher than the first melting temperature of the matrix fibers so that, when both fibers are used to create a composite, at the first melting temperature at which thermofusibility of the matrix fibers occurs, the state of the reinforcing fibers is unaffected. The thermoplastic fibers are appreciated to be recycled, virgin, or a blend thereof. According to embodiments, any thermoplastic fibers in the fiber bundle 14 constitute from 20 to 80 weight percent of the comingled fibers in the present invention.
As shown in cross-section in
As shown in
According to embodiments, the sizing composition 28 is approximately 1% by weight of the total weight of the bundle 22 of fibers and the fiber bundle 22 is approximately 12 microns in diameter and contains approximately 800 individual filament fibers 21, 23. Also, the coating material 24 preferably comprises approximately 20-30% of the weight of the composite roving 13.
The fibers 21, 23 in the bundle of fiber 22 of the roving 13 are reinforcing fibers. These reinforcing fibers are thermally stable at the temperatures involved in the formation of composite materials. These fibers 21, 23 that are used may thus be of many different types, including glass fibers, carbon and graphite fibers, organic fibers, aramid fibers, natural fibers, synthetic fibers, hybrid fibers and combinations thereof that are well known in the art. Preferably, e-type glass, s-type glass, or carbon fibers are used as the reinforcing material.
The sizing composition 28 maintains the individual fibers 21, 23 in a bundle 22 during processing. It therefore is not easy to filamentize the bundle 22 during processing. A low integrity sizing composition, by contrast, allows the bundle strands to easily filamentize. The cross-section of the roving may be elliptical, round, or irregularly shaped.
The coating 24 is a polymer coating, which may be applied to the fiber bundle 22 as a slurry or emulsion coating having a powdered polymer material. The powdered polymer material is a good wetting matrix resin that is capable of being applied as a dip coating at room temperature. According to embodiments, the coating material 24 is capable of melting, flowing, and curing when it is molded into a final composite part. Many different coating materials may be used, including polyesters, bisphenol type epoxies, novalac type epoxies, phenolics, acrylics, polyurethanes, hybrid polymers (for example, an epoxy polyester copolymer or a polyester triglycidylisocyanurate copolymer) and other thermoplastic or thermosetting polymers that exhibit good wetting and processability for making a structural composite part. In addition, the coating 24 may contain film formers that aid in attaching the coating material to the bundles 22. For example, polyurethanes may be used as film formers. Also, the coating 24 may also contain additives that aid in dispersing the coating material in the film former and water and in thickening the slurry to a desired thickness.
According to embodiments, the fiber bundle 14 is arranged on a planar surface, such as a substrate 12 by guiding the fiber bundle 14 and arranging the finer bundle 14 in such a way as to form the plurality of switchbacks 17. As shown in
According to embodiments, such as that shown in
The fiber preform 10 is tunable and easily changed and adapted for varying design requirements. The properties and characteristics of the fiber preform may be changed and modified based on controlling parameters of the various components of the fiber preform including parameters of the fiber bundle 14, the roving 13, and the plurality of stitches 18. Parameters of the fiber bundle may include, but are not limited to, a diameter of the fiber bundle, a ratio of the thermoplastic fibers to the reinforcing fibers, a composition of any thermoplastic fibers, and a composition of the reinforcing fibers. Parameters of the roving may include, but are not limited to, a denier of the roving and the composition of the fibers therein. The parameters of the plurality of stitches 18 of the roving 13 may include, but are not limited to, a linear distance between the stitches and a tension of the stitches.
Referring now to
In
As shown in
The foregoing description is illustrative of particular embodiments of the invention but is not meant to be a limitation upon the practice thereof. The following claims, including all equivalents thereof, are intended to define the scope of the invention.
This application claims priority benefit of U.S. Provisional Application Ser. No. 62/968,422 filed Jan. 31, 2020; the contents of which are hereby incorporated by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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62968422 | Jan 2020 | US |