The subject of this invention is a method of manufacturing a composite part in which the resin is injected into a tool comprising a cavity with the same shape as the part so as to obtain a casting, before polymerising the resin, and a device comprising this tool, that can be used with this method of manufacturing the part.
Such a part may be a blade with a composite structure, composed firstly of a fibre preform installed in advance in the tool, that the resin will impregnate when it is injected.
The various temperature constraints must be respected if the part is to be well manufactured. The resin and the preform must thus be at the same temperature, and the viscosity of the resin must facilitate impregnation of the preform and thus assure good quality of the material in the part after polymerisation. It is difficult to respect this condition because the cross-linking reactions that occur during polymerisation are strongly exothermic and therefore chain reactions can occur leading to a sudden unstable situation in which the temperature of the entire injected resin increases suddenly, adversely affecting the quality of the part because the ideal injection temperature is not maintained, or even explosion of the injector and the tool due to an excessive pressure increase.
This risk of overheating is controlled by keeping the resin at a relatively low temperature in the injector and increasing its temperature along the path between the injector and the tool, so that it reaches the required temperature only when it reaches this tool. A defined length of pipe heated to a temperature above the injector temperature is placed between the injector and the tool. This solution has the disadvantages that in practice, the pipe length necessary to heat the resin from the relatively low temperature required at the injector as it travels along its path is excessive, and that stable heating cannot be maintained throughout the injection, such that in the end, the resin is not hot enough when it reaches the tool; it would also be complex to use a special heating device to maintain the temperature of pipes during injection.
The invention was designed to overcome these disadvantages. The idea is to impose a defined path length on the resin inside the tool before the resin reaches the moulding cavity, so that it can reach the required temperature throughout the injection duration, the tool being heated and easily kept at a constant temperature due to its thermal inertia that is much higher than the thermal inertia of the pipes. Therefore, the temperature rise of the resin between the injector and the moulding cavity is mainly or even exclusively applied inside the solid tool containing the cavity. Note that the heating length required to feed at the required temperature is generally much shorter than with external parts, heating being much more efficient under the conditions of the invention.
In a general form, the invention thus relates to a method of manufacturing a composite part formed from a preform and polymerised resin, consisting of installing the preform in a cavity of a tool formed from at least two moulding shells assembled at at least one parting line, injecting the resin into the cavity and then heating it to polymerise it, characterised in that it comprises a step consisting of making the resin pass through a conduit internal to the tool, extending between an orifice external to the tool and the cavity, and some of its length opens up on at least one of the parting lines, either passing through it or being partially delimited by it, and the tool is heated in a regulated manner while the resin is being injected into the cavity.
Since the external pipework is not very useful or even useless for heating the resin and is expensive (it is usually made of copper), it is advantageously shorter or very much shorter than the conduit internal to the tool.
There is usually no point in heating the external pipework between the injector and the tool while the resin is circulating in it.
The invention also relates to a device for manufacturing a composite part that can be used with the method presented above, and comprising a tool formed from at least two moulding shells assembled at at least one parting line and containing a cavity for the part opening up onto one of the parting lines, characterised in that it comprises a resin injection conduit extending between an orifice external to the tool and the cavity and a length of which leads to at least one of the parting lines either extending through it or being partially delimited by it, and heating means. We have seen that the conduit internal to the tool can conveniently heat the resin with good temperature stability. Its main portion usually opens up onto the parting line, so that it can be cleaned after polymerisation when the tool is open. The conduit considered extends from an inlet into the tool to the moulding cavity, and can also extend along the moulding cavity. It may be restricted to this portion opening up on the parting line, from the inlet orifice into the tool as far as the outlet into the moulding cavity, or it may comprise a much shorter connection leading to the inlet orifice into the tool.
The main portion of the conduit may be sinuous in a quadrilateral zone or along a longer side of the cavity, or in the form of a loop, these various arrangements usually leading to favourable constructions of the tool.
However, it is possible that the tool does not have enough space to hold a sufficiently long conduit at the parting line that separates the enclosure. In this case the tool can be constructed with three shells assembled at two parting lines, the cavity opening up onto only one of them, the main portion of the conduit then extending onto the other parting line.
The invention will now be described with reference to the following figures that describe details of its main aspects through several non-exclusive embodiments:
and
Refer to
Therefore the resin outlet from injector 1 and pipe 3 passes through the conduit 11 from orifice 12 to orifice 13, before filling the cavity 10. In this case the conduit 11 runs along one of the long sides of the cavity 10 and the part to be manufactured, and therefore is long. The resin in it is gradually heated until it reaches the required temperature as it reaches the orifice 13, being heated by the material of the shell 8. The higher thermal inertia of the tool 2 guarantees stable and progressive heating of the resin. Therefore, it must be assumed that it will always be at the required temperature, as it enters the cavity 10, with very small differences. Therefore the risk of an excessive and accidental release of heat leading to an exothermal chain polymerisation reaction is very much reduced.
The shell 8 is provided with grooves in which seals will fit and particularly a groove 14 surrounding the cavity 10 and the conduit 11 and another groove 15 separating the conduit 11 from the cavity 10, extending between a junction 16 at the previous groove 14 and an end 17 opening up into the cavity 10. The seals prevent accidental resin flows either around the cavity 10 or around the conduit 11.
In this embodiment, the conduit 11 opens up onto the parting line 9 over its entire length between the inlet orifice 12 into the tool 2 and the outlet orifice 13 opening up into the cavity 10, so that it can be cleaned after the part has been manufactured, the resin that it contains then being removed. It can be shared between the shells 7 and 8 or it can be formed in only one of them.
The following describes other embodiments of the invention.
Operation of the invention is exactly the same as in the previous embodiment. Note that the orifice 112 leading to the outside also opens up onto the parting line 109, which could be the case in the previous embodiment. A groove 114 surrounding the cavity 110 and the conduit 111 also contains a seal preventing resin from flowing into the parting line 109.
In general, since the resin supply conduit extending from an inlet orifice into the tool to the moulding cavity is long enough so that the resin can be warmed up (although it is much shorter than the length of the external pipes used for heating in previous designs), it is preferred that the majority of its length or all or almost all of its length, opens up onto the parting line to facilitate cleaning after moulding, particularly because the conduit is usually curved.
Advantageous embodiments thus comprise a conduit extending entirely in the parting line from the inlet orifice into the tool as far as the outlet orifice into the cavity (like the embodiment in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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12 51651 | Feb 2012 | FR | national |