T. Koenis, N. van Hoorn, M. Moghadasi
During manufacturing of composite materials residual stresses can result in distortion of the final part. This distortion is even more critical when building on existing parts, such as for a repair, as the added material has to conform to the original structure. To predict this distortion due to curing of thermoset carbon-matrix composite repairs, a numerical modelling method is employed. The temperature cycle applied for the cure of thermoset composites can significantly influence the amount of residual stress and resulting deformation after manufacturing. Therefore, a method is devised to parametrise and subsequently tune this temperature cycle for minimum distortion after manufacturing. Numerical tests with the optimised temperature cycle resulted in a 36% reduction in process induced strain for a repair of a flat laminate plate. The same methodology is applied to a wing box consisting of two composite skins connected by two C-spars where a scarf repair is applied in the skin. The repair patch is locally heated by a heating blanket to cure the repair patch. A subsequent thermalmechanical model is used to investigate the amount of residual stress and strain after cure and the influence of underlying structural elements on the repair. The developed framework can support the patch fabrication with accurate design and analysis for repairs with minimum distortion. Which in turn will result in development of cost-effective composite repairs.
Keywords:
Published on 24/11/22Accepted on 24/11/22Submitted on 24/11/22
Volume Computational Solid Mechanics, 2022DOI: 10.23967/eccomas.2022.274Licence: CC BY-NC-SA license
Views 4Recommendations 0
Are you one of the authors of this document?