Not applicable.
U.S. Patent Application Publication No. US 2011/0039057 Al to Frisch, et al, describes a laminated composite panel stiffened with composite rods with unidirectional fiber reinforcement.
This system does not use the full strength of rods which have higher elastic modulus and strength than the laminated composite. According to the method of the present invention, the high strength rod is used for prestressing the rods stiffened laminated composite panel for achieving higher level of structural efficiency by refining the stress system developed under failure loads in the laminated composite stiffened with rods.
An application of prestressing to wood composite laminate is found in U.S. patent Ser. No. 09/174,888 issued to Karisallen et al. In this application, prestresing is applied to wood strands via fibers which are added to the system for prestressing purposes. Fibers are pretensioned in this application, adhered to wood strands, and then their tension is released in order to precompress the wood strands. This pretensioning effect alters the failure mode of wood strands from tensile to compressive, which makes the failure process more ductile. In the present invention, the pultruded rod which is used as prestressing element is part of the original structure; hence prestressing is applied to the system without the weight and cost penalties associated with introduction of new prestressing element and adhering these elements to the original structure.
The present invention, unlike the method presented by James et al., applies an eccentric prestressing force which improves the structural efficiency of prestressing when compared with concentric prestressing that applies uniform stress on the structure. The configuration of the structure in the prestress invenstion allows for prestressing via application of either tensile or compressive force to the pultruded rod (the prestessing element), which the method presented by James et al. allows for only application of tensile force to prestressing element.
An application of prestressed structures is found in U.S. patent Ser. No. 07/186,434 issued to Rechards et al. which discloses a lightweight structural member made of prestressed plastic foam, wherein prestressing is provided by a plurality of tendons disposed within the foam to which tensile forces are applied during mold casting of the structural member. The tendons are retained in tension by bonding between the tendons and the foam, or by way of anchors which are spaced along the tendons to retain the tendons in immobile condition, one or more skin layers also being optionally provided. The need for the tendons and the requirement for bonding or anchorage of tendons to the structure carry weight and cost penalties. In the present invention, on the other hand, the prestressing rods are already present in the original structure system and thus prestressing does not require introduction of new element and their bonding to the original structure. Also, the prestressing method presented for plastic foams can not be used for thin composite structures. Also, the method presented by Richards et al. allows only for application of tension to prestressing tendons, which the present invention allows for application of either tensile or compressive forces to the prestressing elements.
The above and other objects of the present invention are accomplished by providing a prestressed composite structural member and a method of making a structural member of this type. Structural members according to the present invention are fabricated by assembling a rod stiffened panel preform comprising at least one of stitched composite structure, and pre-cured rods having a generally circular or oval cross-section. The prestressing force is applied by tensioning or compressing pultruded rods and transferring their force via interfacial bond stress to the remainder of the composite structure. The effect of forces in pultruded rods are balances by those of forces in the remainder of the composite structure. Pultruded rods can be stressed prior to or after curing of the composite structures. An important consideration is development of adequate interfacial bond strength for transfer of the prestress force from pultruded bars to the remainder of the composite structures.
The prestressed rod stiffened composite structures produced by the method of the present invention provide higher structural performance comparing to identical non-prestressed structures. This gain in performance is realized because the prestress system counteracts the governing stress system developed in the structure under critical service loads. Prestressing of PRSEUS also enables effective use of the structural qualities of pultruded rods, which are higher than those of the remainder of the structure.
Structural members according to present invention will resemble non-prestressed members. The new system improves the efficiency of structural composites by tailoring the stress system within structure to fully utilize the structural potential of various components, and to avoid premature local failures within composite structures.
This example presents an approach implemented for production of prestressed rod stiffened composite panels.
The first step involves preparation of a dry preform comprising an assembly of multiaxial carbon fiber fabrics and a uniaxial carbon fiber composite rod (
This Example illustrates the approach adopted for production of a prestressed rod-stiffened composite panel with precompressioned rod.
The fabrication begins with prepration of a dry preform using multiaxial carbon fiber fabrics in conjunction with a unidirectional carbon fiber composite rod which is covered with PTFE tube. This assembly is similar to
This invention was made with U.S. government support under Contracts FA8650-09-C-3908 by the U.S. Air Force. The U.S. government has certain rights in the invention.