Disclosed is a process by which resin pre-impregnated woven or nonwoven fabric strips are placed to configure a 3D object. The strips are compacted without a reaction from a 3D object or mandrel.
Compared to traditional metal and plastic materials, composite materials have improved mechanical properties such as high specific stiffness and strength, corrosion resistance, enhanced fatigue life, and improved toughness.
Automated Fabric Placement (AFP) is used to manufacture some objects of composite materials. Currently, the AFP process is almost automated. The fabric usually comes in the form of tape. The tape is typically a bundle of cloth fibers impregnated with resin and is approximately 2.0 to 25.0 mm wide. The thickness of a tape varies between 0.1 mm to 1.50 mm. The tape could contain eight, sixteen, twenty-four, or more cloth fiber lines per tape.
Automated Fabric Placement machines include fabric placement heads laying the tapes onto the surface of a mandrel, mold, or composite object. The fabric placement head consists of a compaction roller that presses the tapes against the object's surface or the preceding layers of material forming the composite part.
The action ensures that the contact between successive strips is uniform along and across the strip and that no trapped air bubbles remain.
Patents and patent application publications U.S. Pat. No. 6,390,169, US 20070044922, US20080138553, US20170087745 US20200307124, and US20210197490 disclose the current state of the art in automated fiber placement.
As used in the present disclosure, the term fabric tape relates to woven or nonwoven fabric tapes.
As used in the present disclosure, the term fabric tape means fiber cloths pre-impregnated or impregnated with resin. The fabric tapes typically are in the form of long ribbons or bands. Each fiber tape could contain eight, sixteen, twenty-four, or more fiber lines per tow.
As used in the present disclosure, the word “tow” means a single strip of fabric.
Described is a method and apparatus for producing a composite material object. The apparatus includes a tape delivery device configured to deliver a plurality of fabric tapes, a pre-impregnation device configured to supply and impregnate the quantity of resin required for the process, and a compaction unit. The fabric tapes are deposited and placed on top of each other to form a desired geometrical shape of the composite material object. The generation of composite material objects of a desired geometrical shape is performed without a mandrel or mold. A source of curing radiation operates to harden or solidify a composite matrix material of compacted strips of composite material. The composite matrix includes a fast curing material such as UV curable acrylate or epoxy systems.
The features and advantages of the disclosure will occur to skilled in the art from the following description and the accompanying drawings, in which identical or similar parts have identical referral numbers.
Compared to traditional metal and plastic materials, composite materials have improved mechanical properties such as high specific stiffness and strength, corrosion resistance, enhanced fatigue life, and improved toughness. Several technologies and methods assist in the manufacture of composite material objects.
Automated fabric placement (AFP) is an automated composite material manufacturing process using resin-impregnated material tapes and spreading them on typically complex mandrels. A fabric tape placement head lays the tapes onto the surface of a mandrel or a composite object. The fabric placement head includes a compaction or consolidation roller that presses the fabric tapes against the surface of a mandrel or the preceding layers of material forming the composite part. Automated fabric placement machines accomplish some processes in manufacturing composite material parts, components, and structures.
Although widely used automated fabric placement machines require a mandrel or mold to manufacture parts from composite material.
The present disclosure describes a method and apparatus using the composite material tapes for manufacturing the desired geometrical shape object without using a mandrel or mold.
The method and apparatus have been described in detail with some specific examples thereof. It will be apparent to one of ordinary skill in the art that various changes and modifications can be made to the method and apparatus without departing from the spirit and scope thereof.
One or more of the required fabric tapes 108 are forced to move through a guide or guides towards a nip formed by a compaction roller 118 and a composite material item 116, which could be a 3D object or mandrel. The compaction roller 118 is a single roller that applies pressure through fabric tape 108 to 3D object 116 or a mandrel. The technique predominantly attaches a composite tape 126 to existing or manufactured objects 116 and changes the object properties. In some examples, a source of UV curing radiation 120, could be used to accelerate tape 126 to object 116 curing.
One or more of the required fabric tapes 108 and 206 are forced to move through a funnel type guide or guides 208 towards an impregnation unit 212 and compaction unit 220.
Apparatus 200 includes a funnel-type guide or guides 208 and an impregnating unit 212. Impregnating unit 212 contains a matrix material resin. A set of pressurized nozzles could be used to spread the resin across the tape. The motion of the tapes 206 and 108 is synchronized to the resin dispensing rate. The impregnation of the newly delivered tape or the joint composite tapes by the matrix material resin takes place in line and concurrently with other processes. The matrix material resin could be one of a group of resins such as fast-curing acrylate or epoxy systems.
A source 216 of UV curing radiation is operative to solidify or harden the impregnated joint fabric tape by a matrix material resin.
Apparatus 200 includes a compaction unit 220. The compaction unit 220 is a pair of cooperating rollers 224 with a nip between them. The cooperating rollers accept a previously cured fabric tape and a newly delivered fabric tape and join the two to form a joint composite material tape 226. The pair of cooperating rollers apply pressure to join the two tapes to form or generate a single composite material tape 226. More than two fabric tapes could be compacted into a single compacted fabric tape. The composite tape impregnation by matrix material resin proceeds concurrently with the cooperating rollers 224 movements.
Each of the cooperating rollers 224 has an independent drive, and cooperating rollers 224 could move towards and away from each other, as illustrated by arrows 232, in a synchronous or asynchronous movement. The movement of the cooperating rollers changes the nip between them and the pressure the cooperating rollers apply to the inserted composite material tape 226 in the nip. The cooperating rollers are also configured to support their movement along their rotation axes 234. The cooperating rollers are also configured to support their movement in a direction perpendicular to their rotation axes 234.
A control computer 240 could be employed to control and coordinate the cooperating rollers 224-1 and 224-2 movements.
A gripper 230 is configured to fix at least one end of the joint composite material tape and hold it through the composite object manufacturing time. Gripper 230 has freedom of linear movement along the axis parallel to axes 234.
A source 216 of UV curing radiation is operative to solidify or harden the impregnated by a matrix material resin joint tape 226. The source of ultraviolet radiation could have a wavelength of 240 to 420 nm suitable to harden a composite matrix material resin. The source of UV curing radiation could be a LED or a wide spectrum mercury lamp.
One or more of the required fabric tapes 108 and 206 are forced to move through a funnel type guide or guides 208 towards an impregnation unit 212 and compaction unit 220.
A control computer 218 could be employed to control and coordinate the cooperating rollers 224-1 and 224-2 movements.
As illustrated by arrows 232, the cooperating rollers 224 could move towards and away from each other, in a synchronous or asynchronous movement. Several apparatus configurations could support such movements.
The use of two or more robotic arms accelerates the composite object manufacture. In some examples, illustrated in
A control computer 218 could be employed to control and coordinate the robotic arm 210 movements.
Number | Date | Country | |
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63391028 | Jul 2022 | US |