Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1466890 Composites Part A: Applied Science and Manufacturing 2010 7 Pages PDF
Abstract

Resin flow during Compression Resin Transfer Molding (CRTM) can be best described and analyzed in three phases. In the first phase, a gap is created by holding the upper mold platen parallel to the preform surface at a fixed distance from it. The desired amount of resin injected into the gap quickly flows primarily over the preform. The second phase initiates when the injection is discontinued and the upper mold platen moves down squeezing the resin into the deforming preform until the mold surface comes in contact with the preform. Further mold closure during the final phase will compact the preform to the desired thickness and redistribute the resin to fill all empty spaces. This paper describes the second phase of the infusion. We assume that at the end of phase one; there is a uniform resin layer that covers the entire preform surface. This constrains the resin to flow in through the thickness direction during the second phase. We model this through the thickness flow as the load on the upper mold forces the resin into the preform, simultaneously compacting the preform. The constitutive equations describing the compaction of the fabric as well as its permeability are included in the analysis. A numerical solution predicting the flow front progression and the deformation is developed and experimentally verified. Non-dimensional analysis is carried out and the role of important non-dimensional parameters is investigated to identify their correlations for process optimization.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Materials Science Ceramics and Composites
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