Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
11026780 Composites Part A: Applied Science and Manufacturing 2018 9 Pages PDF
Abstract
Fibre print-through on the surfaces of composites emerges as a consequence of the heterogeneous mix of matrix and reinforcing fibres and is one of the obvious surface imperfections that differentiates them from conventional materials. Visible surfaces in the body shell of vehicles demand high Class A requirements without any surface imperfections. Currently, fibre print-through on glossy painted surfaces is evaluated subjectively by human auditors. An overreliance on subjective human evaluation has arisen due to a lack of methods and parameters for characterising this phenomenon. To understand which characteristics are responsible for human perception and to determine suitable parameters for the evaluation of print-through effects, the subjective perception of 25 participants measured by multidimensional scaling is correlated to a fitted parameter regarding fibre print-through and conventional parameters such as long- or shortwave, or the arithmetic mean Ra. The comparison of various characteristics of fibre print-through to coated aluminium enables a limiting value to be set based on perception.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Materials Science Ceramics and Composites
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