Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1465926 Composites Part A: Applied Science and Manufacturing 2015 12 Pages PDF
Abstract

An actively cooled vascular polymer matrix composite containing 3.0% channel volume fraction retains greater than 90% flexural stiffness when exposed continuously to 325 °C environmental temperature. Non-cooled controls suffered complete structural failure through thermal degradation under the same conditions. Glass–epoxy composites (Tg = 152 °C) manufactured by vacuum assisted resin transfer molding contain microchannel networks of two different architectures optimized for thermal and mechanical performance. Microchannels are fabricated by vaporization of poly(lactide) fibers treated with tin(II) oxalate catalyst that are incorporated into the fiber preform prior to resin infiltration. Flexural modulus, material temperature, and heat removal rates are measured during four-point bending testing as a function of environmental temperature and coolant flow rate. Simulations validate experimental measurements and provide insight into the thermal behavior. Vascular specimens with only 1.5% channel volume fraction centered at the neutral bending axis also retained over 80% flexural stiffness at 325 °C environmental temperature.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Materials Science Ceramics and Composites
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