Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
7891254 | Composites Part A: Applied Science and Manufacturing | 2016 | 10 Pages |
Abstract
Exposure to high heat can cause polymer matrix composites (PMC) to fail under mechanical loads easily sustained at room temperature. However, heat is removed and temperature reduced in PMCs by active cooling through an internal vascular network. Here we compare structural survival of PMCs under thermomechanical loading with and without active cooling. Microchannels are incorporated into autoclave-cured carbon fiber/epoxy composites using sacrificial fibers. Time-to-failure, material temperature, and heat removal rates are measured during simultaneous heating on one face (5-75Â kW/m2) and compressive loading (100-250Â MPa). The effects of applied compressive load, heat flux, channel spacing, coolant flow rate, and channel distance from the heated surface are examined. Actively cooled composites containing 0.33% channel volume fraction survive without structural failure for longer than 30Â min under 200Â MPa compressive loading and 60Â kW/m2 heat flux. In dramatic comparison, non-cooled composites fail in less than a minute under the same loading conditions.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Materials Science
Ceramics and Composites
Authors
Anthony M. Coppola, Luke G. Warpinski, Sean P. Murray, Nancy R. Sottos, Scott R. White,