The present invention relates to a process for manufacturing structures formed by a lining with closed section stiffeners, manufactured with composite material, particularly applicable to aeronautic fuselages.
Weight is an essential aspect in the aeronautical industry, therefore optimized structures manufactured with composite materials prevail over metallic ones.
Automatic carbon fibre taping machines are a great development with respect to manual operation. These machines have a head which presses the surface to be taped, so said surface must react said force.
Applying the foregoing aspects to aeronautical fuselages leads to integrating the panels with their stiffeners in the lowest number of operations and to optimizing said stiffeners.
Closed section stiffeners allow achieving stiffer structures by adding a lower weight per stiffener. Incorporating this type of stiffener complicates the manufacturing process because it requires tools inside the stiffeners allowing the taping of the piece and the curing operation of the composite material and removing the stiffeners from inside the stiffener if this is intended to be hollow.
Processes for manufacturing said structures are known in which a stiff element is introduced inside the stiffener section to react the taping pressure and the composite material curing pressure.
These processes are expensive so it is desirable to have more efficient processes, an objective which is achieved by the present invention.
In a first aspect, the present invention proposes a process for manufacturing stiffened structures in composite materials formed by an outer coating and a plurality of stiffeners the cross-section of which has a broken contour with at least one flange joined to the coating, said contour delimiting an inner opening, characterized in that it comprises the following steps:
In a second aspect, the present invention provides a process for manufacturing stiffened structures in composite materials formed by an outer coating and a plurality of stiffeners the cross-section of which has a broken contour with at least one flange joined to the coating, said contour delimiting an inner opening, characterized in that it comprises the steps of the foregoing process until the curing process and a subsequent step of removing the shaping tool from the structure. That is, the basic difference with the foregoing process is that the structure is removed from the shaping toll before curing.
In a third aspect, the present invention provides auxiliary male tools used in the foregoing processes in which the inert material is a granular material, for example sand.
An advantage of the present invention is that it facilitates manufacturing structures in which the section and the area of the stiffeners vary longitudinally and even have smaller dimensions than the intermediate section in one or both ends, because the auxiliary male tools can be shaped so as to be adapted to it.
Another advantage is that it facilitates using machines with a pressing taping head because the auxiliary male tools provide a substrate inside the stiffeners for reacting the force of the head.
Other features and advantages of the present invention will be disclosed in the following detailed description of an illustrating embodiment of the object relating to the attached drawings.
a, 1b and 1c show schematic views of structures formed by a coating and a plurality of omega, trapezium and irregular Z shaped stiffeners, respectively.
An embodiment of the process according to the invention for manufacturing stiffened structures 11 in composite materials formed by a coating 13 and a plurality of omega-shaped (Ω) stiffeners 15 with flanges 17 joined to coating 13, and cores 18 and head 21 separated from it will be described later on.
The process object of the present invention is also applicable for manufacturing a stiffened structure 51 formed by a coating 53 and a plurality of trapezium-shaped stiffeners 55 with flanges 57 joined to coating 53, and cores 59 and head 61 separated from it, as well as a stiffened structure 71 formed by a coating 73 and a plurality of irregular Z-shaped stiffeners 75 with a flange 77 joined to the coating 73, and cores 79 and head 81 separated from it.
What stiffeners 15, 55 and 75 have in common is that their cross-section has a broken contour with at least a flange 17, 57, 77 joined to the coating 13, 53, 73 said contour delimiting an inner opening 23, 63, 83.
Structures 11, 51, 71 can have an open form or a revolving piece form as in the case of airplane fuselage pieces.
Proceeding now to the description of the process, it can be observed by following
Cured or uncured stiffeners 15 can be used.
Male auxiliary tools 37 are obtained by confining an inert granular material, for example sand, n a container and providing it with a geometry similar to the inner opening 23 of the stiffener, using for that purpose a container of a suitable material and a suitable shaping technique. The granular material allows compaction with or without a binder.
When each auxiliary male tool 37 is introduced in the opening 23 of the stiffener 15, the curing membrane 39 is aided in being coupled to the inner geometry of each stiffener 15.
The stiffeners 15 and the male tools 37 can be arranged on the shaping tool 31, having been previously coupled.
It can be observed in
A variant of the process is the manual taping operation of coating 13.
It can be observed in
A variant of the process is curing without the need for an autoclave. In another variant, the auxiliary male member may be removed prior to curing.
Once the structure 11 is cured and cooled, the substrate inner to the auxiliary male tools 37 is removed, as illustrated in
Modifications comprised within the scope defined by the following claims can be introduced in the preferred embodiment which has just been described.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/ES2006/070039 | Mar 2006 | WO | international |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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2454719 | Scogland | Nov 1948 | A |
4681724 | Faiz et al. | Jul 1987 | A |
4946526 | Petty-Galis et al. | Aug 1990 | A |
5170967 | Hamamoto et al. | Dec 1992 | A |
6746642 | Buge et al. | Jun 2004 | B2 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20080202680 A1 | Aug 2008 | US |