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Impregnation of Textile
Fibers, and Fiber Reinforcements of Resin-Matrix
Composites
1.
Introduction
Resin-matrix composites and especially
fiber-reinforced plastics (FRPs) have a wide variety of applications
ranging from mass-produced tennis rackets to automobiles to complex
aerospace structures. Their reinforcements may be in the form of cloth,
mats, strand and other fibers of glass, carbon/graphite, aramides
etc.
FRP quality depends heavily on the bonding strength between
its polymer matrix and the reinforcement. Impregnation may be a decisive
step in achieving good adhesion and strong bonding. During impregnation,
the entire surface of the reinforcement must come into contact with the
matrix material. Otherwise, gas-filled bubbles, crevices and other
discontinuities may be present that will adversely affect the properties
of prepreg, wet lay, and finished material or components.
Among the
fiber material filaments, however, there always are small pores and
interstices filled with air. The air may block the impregnant penetration
into some of such capillary type passages. No wetting of their surfaces
will therefore occur, resulting in poor bonding.
Vacuum, high
pressure and other techniques are conventionally used for a more nearly
complete penetration of the impregnant. This, however, is seldom achieved,
even though expensive equipment, long processing times and high additional
costs may be involved.
The project is aimed at developing a quick,
effective and low-cost method to ensure perfect impregnation of fiber
reinforcements with organic impregnants.
2. Project
Description 2.1. Process Development
The method
eliminates vacuum or high pressure equipment and may require only minor,
if any, modifications in the existing equipment. It relies on a simple
three-step treatment of the fiber material directly before impregnation.
The pretreatment removes all air trapped in the open pores and involves
the following steps carried out in quick succession:
heating the
fiber material, introducing a specific nonreactive gas,
and desorption of the gas.
It activates every open
pore/interstice and results in their quick and complete filling during the
impregnating step.
2.2. Materials and Equipment
The
nonreactive gas characteristics and the timing are unique to each
fiber/resin system. This necessitates their tailoring to the system at
hand. The gas will invariably be selected among those inexpensive and
readily available ones.
The equipment will be the same for any
system to be processed. The process allows continuous and batch operation
alike.
2.3. Process and Product Characteristics
Experiments
with graphite and glass reinforcements revealed that the method may
improve the fiber surface area coverage by 30 % and shorten the
impregnating step time 2-fold. Importantly, no selective sorption of any
components of impregnant occurred.
These improvements were even
greater with high-viscous impregnants.
The laboratory test data
were validated by reliable service of prepregged components in some
high-performance applications.
3.
Novelty
The method is believed to be patentable because it
has not been disclosed and no analog to it has been found in the
literature.
4. Marketing
The market for
resin-matrix composites, particularly FRPs, is ever expanding in commodity
industries and high-performance applications alike.
The cost of
equipment adaptation to the new process is negligible as is the running
cost for the new appliance. It is further assumed that the existing vacuum
and/or high pressure equipment used for impregnation may be taken out of
service. The economic gain from the new method may thus be roughly
estimated from the following relationship [1]:
Processing cost,
$/unit product = (Hourly machine cost, $/h)/(Production rate,
unit/h) = (Initial hourly cost - Vacuum/pressure equipment hourly cost,
$/h)/2,
which gives at least a 2-fold reduction in the impregnation
cost. The product cost is further cut down due to an anticipated 30% drop
in the rejection rate.
At the customer's side, the gain will come
directly from reduced price and also indirectly from improved service
properties and durability of product.
5.
Application
Aerospace and automotive components, building
materials, coated fabrics, construction components, conveyor belts,
machine components, protective clothing, ships, sporting goods, and tires
are among the first-priority applications.
The method can also be
readily adapted for the textile industry at large. Here, all fibers and
fabrics undergo some kind of "impregnation" via e.g. dipping for purposes
of dyeing, discharging, proofing etc. The method offers increased
production rates and improved product quality.
DSc.,
Prof. William Zadorsky,
Academician of the Ukrainian Ecological Academy,
Ukrainian State University of Chemical Engineering.
Pridneprovie Cleaner Production Center
Tel: +(380) 567 440210
Tel/fax: +(380) 562 470813
e-mail: ecofond@ecofond.dp.ua
technobiz@dicht.dp.ua
http://www.crosswinds.net/~usuce/index.html
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