1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to a system and method for monitoring the curing of composite materials.
2. Other Related Applications
The present application claims international priority of Spanish patent No. P200403062 filed on Dec. 15, 2004.
3. Description of the Related Art
Composite materials have been significantly improved over last decade due to their capability to produce lightweight, stiff structures with custom-tailored directional characteristics. One of the most critical phases of the manufacture process is the cure of the resin acting as matrix. Cure problems can lead to scrapping the manufactured part. During the cure process, the part is under a combination of temperature and pressure conditions, generally established by the raw material manufacturer, based on experimental data, and designed to achieve correct matrix solidification.
However, standard cure processes are based on simple laboratory specimens and are not optimized for very complex geometry parts. Besides, in part areas of large thickness, high temperature gradients can be produced leading to a non-nominal cure. In a similar manner, an incorrect distribution of the heat sources can lead to an incomplete resin cure or, on the contrary, to an over curing due to the high temperatures.
There are great number of patents related to monitoring composite material cure processes employing different systems and procedures. U.S. Pat. No. 4,891,591 patent, employs a system based on the variation of the electromagnetic field to measure the cure; this method has the disadvantage of being applicable only to materials having electric conductivity properties. U.S. Pat. No. 4,921,415 patent deals with a system based on ultrasonic waves, appropriate for high temperature cure processes. U.S. Pat. No. 5,009,104 patent also describes a system based on ultrasonic waves. U.S. Pat. No. 5,436,565 patent describes a cure monitoring method based on the electric capacity measurement, applicable only to dielectric materials as epoxy resins. U.S. Pat. No. 5,770,155 and CN1350174 patents use fiber optic sensors; fiber optic sensors have the inconvenient to give information of the cure process up to resin gelation point, while the method related in this application is able to give information during all the cure process. U.S. Pat. No. 5,911,159 patent deals with monitoring resin parts by using guided acoustic waves, which implies the introduction of an acoustic wave conductor element to measure the propagation velocity of these waves through the resin piece. Finally U.S. Pat. No. 6,675,112 B1 patent describes the cure monitoring employing the response of the system to excitations based on very low frequency pressure waves; the method described in this application employs excitations of a higher frequency to obtain a better answer of the different vibration modes or very short electric waves to measure “time of flight” of the wave, so that, obtaining the material stiffness during the cure process.
A system allowing to control in a real-time the cure process will help reducing the number of defects in the final part and/or to improve the cure cycle, minimizing the manufacturing time and, therefore, reducing costs. The system and method proposed in this document makes it possible to avoid the previously mentioned difficulties and to improve the composite material part manufacturing process, cutting down its cost due to the smaller proportion of scrap parts and due to the reduction on the manufacturing time, for the following reasons:
The present invention relates to a system and method for the monitoring of different resin and advanced composite materials cure processes, manufactured from small diameter fibers of different disposition, embedded in a resin matrix. Proposed system is of special application but not limited to curing processes of aeronautical structures.
The figures included in this document help to explain the invention, supporting in a graphic way, the following description.
The method and system for cure monitoring related in this document are applicable for the different manufacturing processes existing nowadays, including;
System involved in this patent comprising;
In any form, the required equipment will be installed (not described in this document) in the part, mould, oven or in the autoclave, to support the cables and/or the wireless equipments that connect the piezoelectric elements to the signal actuation and reception equipments. Piezoelectric material will be selected so its Curie temperature being, at least, two times the maximum temperature of the cure cycle. Therefore, it may be chosen, v.gr. but not solely, lead titanate-zirconate (PZT) for curing temperatures up to 100-150 ° C., and litium tantalate (LiTaO3) or litium niobiate (LiNbO3) for greater temperatures.
In the case of the system comprises more than one piezoelectric element, it will be needed to use a switching device to be able to select the piezoelements that act as actuators as well as the piezoelements that act as sensors. Such device could be operated by means of a computer or manually.
The Embodiments of This Invention Comprise:
The installation of a piezoceramic transducers network arranged on a composite material part to be cured, see
The connection of the piezoelements to the signal generation and acquisition systems, in such way as described above.
The generation, by means of a signal generator connected to the piezoelements that have the role of actuators, of impulsive like signal, of very short duration (some milliseconds), or monochromatic waveforms. In the last case, the frequency of the signal will be included between 100 Hz and 20 kHz, and will consist of 3 to 7 cycles. Additionally a Hamming windowing (or other type) can be applied to avoid leakage in the frequency response.
The transmission of the elastic wave, generated by the actuator piezoelement, through the corresponding part to be cured.
The synchronized recording of the direct signal received by the other or other piezoelements, acting as sensors, placed on the part being cured, to measure the time of flight of the elastic waves. Once the time of flight of the signal (ti) is obtained, and guessing that the distance between piezoelements (di) is known, the wave propagation velocity (Ci) can be calculated as:
The rigidity characteristics of the specimen for the direction i can be obtained applying the following equation:
κi=ρCi2 Ec. (2)
where, κi is the compressibility module and ρ is the density of the material. The variation of this value versus time, as the presented in the
The generation, by means of a signal generator connected to the actuator piezoelements, of chirps of short duration (some tenths of second) and a frequency range that includes one (the first) or some of the natural frequencies of the part to manufacture, that are susceptible to change during the curing development.
The transmission of the elastic wave, generated by the actuator piezotransducer, through the part that is being cured.
The synchronized record of the frequency response of the system at the locations of where piezotransducer sensors are located, as presented in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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P200403062 | Dec 2004 | ES | national |