Composite Manufacturing 101
Composite Manufacturing 101
Composite Manufacturing 101
Greg Hasko Applications Engineer Connecticut Center for Advanced Technology [email protected]
Introduction
This document is intended to be an introduction to the various processes used in manufacturing structural composites for aerospace. We review the raw materials, primary and secondary manufacturing methods, inspection, emerging methods, and software tools that enhance the flow of information between design, analysis and manufacturing. Links are provided to the sources in each of the topics covered. This document will be updated on at least an annual basis.
Contents
page Part Characteristics Airframe vs Engine Raw Materials Fibers, Matrices, Inserts Manufacturing Methods Shaping and Curing Material Formats Processes & Equipment 4 6 11 19 25
Emerging Methods
Software Tools Design, Analysis, Manufacturing National Resource Centers
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71 83
Large dimensions; several feet to 10s of feet. Low to medium contour. Mostly moderate temperature environment. Need damage tolerance. Some need anti-ice. Mostly one part / per part-number / per vehicle.
Fiber Materials
Aerospace parts are made from a few types of fibers. They vary widely in density, mechanical properties and cost.
If not planned carefully, fiber deposition can add high labor costs.
The thermal expansion needs to be accounted for in tool design.
Density [Lb/in3] Fiberglass [two types] Aramid [multiple brands] .091 .052 max use temp [F] 700 500 modulus [MLb/in2] 10-13 17 strength [KLb/in2] 500-650 400 CTE [x10-6 in/in/F] 3 -3.5
.063
.090
1000
2400
33/43/64+
28
300-800+
400
-.05
2
Matrix Materials
Aerospace parts are made with several types of matrix materials. They vary widely in temperature resistance, processing characteristics and cost.
Density [Lb/in3] Epoxy Bismaleimide [BMI] .046 .046 max use temp [F] 200 300 modulus [MLb/in2] 0.5 0.7 strength [KLb/in2] 10 15 CTE [x10-6 in/in/F] 40 40
Polyimide
Polyethersulfone [PES] Polyetherether-ketone [PEEK] Carbon Ceramic Metal
.052
.049 .048 .063 .090 .10-.16
500+
350 250 3000+ 2000+ 1000+
0.5
.4 0.5 1-2 10 10-17
10
12 15 1 10 20-100
25
27 25 1-2 2 5-12 8
Metallic fasteners with special features for strong joints in composites, typically bonded in place. Various materials are being embedded to enable structural health monitoring and actuation. 9
Adhesives
There is a wide variety of adhesives used in aerospace structures, available in several compositions and forms.
Form
Paste Film Foaming Powder Tackifier
Characteristics
Usually a 2-part system that is mixed just prior to application. Some cure at room temperature, some at elevated temperature. Thin films supplied on rolls, and must be refrigerated. They can be cut and applied in selected patterns. They require heat to cure. These are pastes that foam upon cure, to fill hollows in a part or to splice edges of honeycomb cores. Usually a version of the matrix resin that is applied to dry fabric used for RTM parts. The powder is used to provide tack to hold plies together during preforming steps. It should not detract from the cured mechanical properties. A wide variety of materials and forms take advantage of the unique properties at the nanometer level. Order-of-magnitude increases are possible in mechanical and electrical properties of matrix resins, adhesives and coatings. 10
Nano Additives
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Manufacturing Methods
There are two main approaches for manufacturing of composites, based on whether the resin is introduced before or after shaping the fibers.
Choices made in the design of a part influence which branch is followed, and the types of processes and equipment that are used. Cost-effective parts need to be designed with a knowledge of the processes involved. Repeatable quality and cost are achieved by properly specifying all parameters.
SHAPING FIBER RESIN RESIN CURE
SHAPING
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Manufacturing Methods
Another way to classify manufacturing processes is by the shaping and the curing methods. Shaping Fabric, Manual Prepreg or, w/ Tackifier Stitching Machine Filament Wind Braid 3D Weave Pultrude Stitching + fixtures Automated Fiber Placement Curing - Heat & Presure Self-Contained Mold Press Autoclave/Vacuum Bag Oven/Vacuum Bag Electron Beam/Vacuum Bag Pultrusion
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ROLL WRAP
PULTRUDE
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OVEN
RESIN
DRY FIBER
PULTRUDE
RESIN
OVEN, PRESS
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Drawing
Ply orientation
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Guidelines
All surfaces are tooled Good for multi-hollow parts All surfaces are tooled Practical size limited by press capacity Usually one surface is tooled, but can add caul sheet on opposite side High capital and operating costs
Airframe Engine
X X X X X
X
X X
Pultrusion
Machining
X
X X 17
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Material Formats
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Resins are applied to single tows that are up to wide, or to 2D fabrics, that are stored on spools. This process, called prepregging, adds cost but eliminates the need for the part fabricator to worry about resin mixing and resin content. The physics of resin flow into fibers limit the ply thickness that can be made to the range of .005 to .050. The primary type of resin used in aerospace is thermosetting, has a limited working time at room temperature, and must be stored under refrigeration. Thermoset prepregs are tacky, which aids laying up plies into contoured molds. Thermoplastic prepregs do not need refrigeration, and are not tacky.
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Dry processing uses the lowest cost form of the raw materials. Resin is introduced by the Resin Transfer Molding [RTM] process, or by in-line wetout. The thickness that can be molded is only limited by the resin characteristics; the flow time before it gels and the threat of exotherm in thick areas. Some resins give off gaseous byproducts that need to be removed before cure. Dry fibers are not tacky, and require binder materials or stitching to stabilize complex shapes. Some binders are thermosetting and dissolve into the matrix resin.
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Many types; plain, satin, crowfoot, etc. Widths can be up to 5. Large databases of material properties exist. The size and type of fiber in each direction can be varied to create hybrids. An extreme case is uniweave, with heavy graphite in one direction and fine fiberglass in the other, to approximate prepreg tape.
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To improve impact, strength and thermal properties in the thickness direction, a variety of methods are available: 3D Weaving & Braiding Jacquard looms, etc Stitching industrial strength Z Pins small embedded composite pins
3D weaving and braiding also reduce ply layup labor; however the linear production rate is slower than 2D fabrics.
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Hand Layup
This is the traditional method, needing trained technicians. It can be done with prepreg and dry material. To form the material around tight contours without wrinkling, relief slits or darts are cut. Fibers within a ply shear and skew as they are placed onto contoured molds. The pattern of darts and the sequence of laying down the perimeter of large plies needs to be repeated from part to part. This method is susceptible to FOD being cured within the laminate; gloves, tape, knife blades, etc.
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For repeatability when using hand layup, guides are needed to align ply directions and edges. These guides can be scribe lines on molds, mylar sheets, or fabricated metal or composite templates that pin into location at the edge of the mold. Plies at the edge of a part may have extra tabs designed into the flat patterns to allow verification by an inspector. These tabs are trimmed off after cure.
Note that the weave pattern distorts when placed onto a contoured mold. The hoop strength of the red zone is much different than the blue zone. The designer must specify the draping method, and this information must be transmitted to the shop floor. See the Software section for packages that can simulate draping.
+/-30
0/90
27
Projectors that operate from CAD data display ply patterns and fiber angles onto the mold during hand layup. Line width adjustment is needed in highly sloped areas. Tolerance bands can be indicated in the projected pattern.
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These machines are used for dry or prepreg material. Ply shapes are determined manually and scanned into a digital data file, or determined from software that models draping and flattening for contoured shapes. Software is also used to pack the ply patterns efficiently to minimize waste when cutting.
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Braiding Processes
Modified shoelace machines are used, usually with dry fibers. Braided sleeving can be packaged on a spool for hand layup, or contoured mandrels can be fed through the machine to braid onto the net shape. Braided preforms typically go into an RTM process, although prepreg and in-line wetout have been demonstrated. Large commercial braiders have an approximate 7-foot ID, which can be fully covered with near-hoopwise fibers. However, another limit is the diameter that can be fully covered at a given angle with the fiber bandwidth of about .25. The maximum diameter that can be fully covered at a 45 degree angle is 8. Specialty braiders exist that are almost four times this size. Since all the spools on the machine must pass over and under each other, they are smaller than those on weaving looms. Therefore, reloading time is a factor in determining the maximum attainable length and cost. Typical parts include propeller spars, missile bodies, bushings, accessory beams.
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Braiding Parameters
Biaxial
Triaxial
Braiding machines can be set up to deliver one or two sets of fiber; a biaxial set and an axial [0 degree] set. The combination of biaxial and axial is called triaxial. The angle of the biaxial fibers can range from nearly 0 degrees to nearly 90 degrees. Different types and weights of fiber can be used to create hybrids. The choices of these parameters depend on the structural and cost requirements. Straight and curved parts can be made by using appropriate mandrel handling devices. The cross-section can not have concave areas, or the fibers will bridge. Severe cross section changes can be accommodated, such as the transition from the cylinder to the flange of a bushing. The mandrel can be reciprocated back and forth to build up layers. Other fabrics and core materials can be inserted between layers. Removable pins on the mandrel enable net-shaped holes without drilling.
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3Tex I-Beam
Jacquard Loom
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Pultrusion Process
Dry fibers are pulled through a resin applicator and a curing die. Shaping and curing occur nearly simultaneously. Typical parts are floor beams and strengthening inserts in wing spars. Entire wing sections have been demonstrated. Parts are limited to straight, constant crosssectional shapes. Parts to several feet in width can be pultruded, given enough pulling capacity. Length is limited only by the creel capacity and take-up provisions. Fabrics, cores and inserts can be incorporated. A variation called Pullforming is used in the automotive industry to make leaf springs. Wet fibers are drawn onto a heated rotating mandrel having a shaped cavity.
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RTM Transmission Fitting Thick-wall graphite composite. ~20-piece mold was used.
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RTM Mold
Injector or pressure pot
Vacuum Pump
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Inlet and outlet ports locations optimized to completely fill the preform. High stiffness to resist preform compaction and resin injection pressures. Clamps - either around the perimeter, or use an external frame or press. Heating can be integrally heated with electric rods, steam, or hot oil, or a press or oven can be used. Sensors thermocouples and other types to monitor pressure and degree of cure. Vacuum-tight; O-rings enclose the part cavity. The mold can have multiple cavities.
This is done on a one-sided mold, with a vacuum bag on other side. Resin is drawn into the preform with vacuum. A high-flow media can be placed over the preform so that resin quickly spans large parts. The bagged side has a rougher surface than the mold side after cure. Mechanical properties are typically lower than with an autoclave pressure cure or with matched mold RTM. Parts can be up to 10s of feet in size.
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For VARI processing an open container will suffice, since resin is drawn in with a vacuum pump. For injection into a matched mold, a pressurized paint pot can be used. Positive displacement pumps enable computerized process control and recording. Meter-mix machines can be used with dual component resins. Most resins need to be heated to reduce viscosity, so heated chambers and delivery hoses are available.
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Prepreg materials can be cured in a matched mold as in RTM, giving good surface finish throughout [as opposed to bag methods such as autoclave or VARI]. Maximum size is governed by press capacity, typically up to several feet. Vacuum is typically not needed. Proper sequencing of pressure during the heat cycle is critical to making void-free parts with proper fiber alignment. Typical parts are stator vanes.
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Automated Fiber Placement [AFP] takes filament winding a step further. It uses prepreg fibers placed onto a contoured mold with a multi-axis head. Fibers are stabilized by the resin tackiness and contact rollers. Labor content is reduced and speed increases compared to hand layup. Typical parts are fuselage and nacelle skins. The size can be 10s of feet on a side. Both the mold and the fiber placement head are in motion. Individual fibers can be cut and restarted to cover any shape at any angle. As opposed to filament winding, concave features are permissible. Parts are vacuum bagged and cured in an autoclave. See videos: http://www.automateddynamics.com/video_library.php
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Special machines have been developed to deposit prepreg fabric. They can lay fabric on a mold and trim the edge. They are used for mildly contoured shapes such as wing skins.
A variation is to use a pick and place robot to stack pre-cut plies on a mold.
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Prepreg is rolled onto a mandrel and cured in an autoclave, or shrink wrapped for an oven cure. Mandrels must be straight and circular, but can be tapered or stepped. Tables typically are designed for parts up to 10 length and up to 6 diameter. Typical parts are truss tubes.
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Autoclaves
Heated pressure vessels are normally used to cure prepreg materials. They can be 10s of feet in diameter and length. One-sided molds are normally used, and several parts that have the same resin can be cured together. Resin Film Infusion into dry preforms has been demonstrated on large parts having translaminar reinforcement.
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Heated Press
Used for compression molding and RTM. Heat is supplied by electric cal rods or an oil system. Presses typically have one axis of motion for slightly contoured parts, but custom presses have been built with multiple axes.
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Ovens
Ovens can be 10s of feet in length, width and height. They may have a rotisserie for filament wound parts, to avoid resin pooling. They are used for heating bolted RTM molds or vacuum-bagged VARI molds. Heating can be electric, gas or oil. The floors may need to withstand multi-ton molds.
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Machining
The tool bits, feeds, speeds and coolants used to machine composites are specific to the matrix and fiber combination. Excessive heating causes polymeric resins to decompose. Improper cutting tools can pull fibers out of the resin locally. Lasers and waterjets are used, especially on ceramic matrix composites where the part is made out of similar materials as the cutting tools themselves. Trim & Drill Fixture Residual stresses locked into the part during cure can cause parts to deform or delaminate during machining.
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Bonding Fixture
Custom-designed fixtures are used to hold parts accurately and maintain bondline thickness despite thermal expansion effects. They can be self-heated or used in an oven. For quality control they are instrumented with thermocouples.
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Company
V Systems ITT Integrated Structures [ex Fiber Innovations] AAR Composites Albany Engineered Composites GKN-CT/AL/St Louis Cobham [ex Sparta] North Coast GKN-CT/AL/St Louis CTL Aerospace CHI Matrix Cobham [ex Sparta]
Web site
www.vsc-inc.com www.defense.itt.com www.aarcorp.com/composites www.albint.com/aec www.gknaerospace.com www.composites.sparta.com www.northcoastcomposites.com www.gknaerospace.com www.ctlaerospace.com www.chi-covina.com www.matrixcorp.com www.composites.sparta.com 53
method
Manual Layup/ Autoclave Mold
company
Spirit Aerosystems GKN-AL ITT Integrated Structures Vermont Composites V Systems Hexcel Kaman Matrix Cobham [ex Sparta] Tighitco Lincoln Kazak Vought ATK Hitco www.spiritaerosystems.com www.gknaerospace.com www.defense.itt.com www.vtcomposites.com www.vsc-inc.com www.hexcel.com www.kamanaero.com www.matrixcorp.com www.composites.sparta.com http://www.tighitco.com/ www.lincolncomposites.com www.kazakcomposites.com www.voughtaircraft.com www.atk.com www.hitco.com 54
Equipment Maker
Wabash Pacific Press Technical Machine Products
Tarrico American Autoclave ASC Process Systems
Autoclave
Method
Filament Winder Oven Robotic Ply Layup
Equipment Maker
Entec McClean Anderson Wisconsin Grieve Composite Systems Diaphorm www.entec.com www.mccleananderson.com www.wisoven.com www.grievecorp.com www.compositemfg.com www.diaphorm.com
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Ply Cutters
RTM Injectors
Non-contact Dimensional Measurement
www.radiusengineering.com www.graco.com
www.steinbichler.de www.creaform3d.com www.twincoastmetrology.com
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Inspection Methods
Equipment Makers
Laminate NDI Physical Acoustics - Acoustic Emmission Imperium - Digital Acoustic Video A2 - Exoscan handheld FTIR Evisive - Microwave Scanning LSP Technologies - Laser Bond Inspection Photo Emission Tech - UV Surface Excitation Advanced Structural Imaging - Computer-Aided Tap Test Boeing - Mobile Automated Ultrasonic Scanner [MAUS] Digiray - Motionless Laminography X-Ray Steinbichler - Laser Shearography www.mistrasgroup.com www.imperiuminc.com www.a2technologies.net www.evisive.com www.lsptechnologies.com www.photoemission.com www.asi-nde.com www.boeing.com www.digiray.com www.steinbichler.de
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Inspection Methods
Equipment Makers
Laminate NDI Laser Technology - Laser Shearography Thermal Wave Imaging - Pulsed Thermography Wichitech - Electronic Digital Tap Hammer Quality Material Inspection - Air-coupled Ultrasound Honeywell International - Structural Anomaly Mapping System [SAM], acoustic/laser Lockheed - Laser Ultrasonic Technology PaR Systems - Laser Ultrasonic Technology iPhoton - Laser Ultrasonic Technology Mitsui Engineering - Woodpecker automated tap tester Sonatest - Ultrasonic wheel probe array www.laserndt.com www.thermalwave.com www.wichitech.com www.qmi-inc.com www.honeywell.com www.lockheedmartin.com www.par.com www.iphoton.com www.mes.co.jp www.sonatest.com
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Equipment Makers
Uniweave, Dry & Prepreg Plain & Satin Weave, Dry & Prepreg Western Advanced Engineering numerous
Equipment Users
Hexcel, Cytec, Nelcote, APCM, YLA Textile Products Inc, Hexcel
Braid, Dry
Non Crimp Fabrics Filament Wind 3D Weave Stitched Fabrics, Dry Z-pins, Prepreg
Issues
Need automation; constitutes large portion of part fabrication labor. Labor content and accuracy can be improved by multiaxis CNC. Need a nondestructive method to verify ply angles and ply boundaries. Need NDI instruments that can reach into tight spaces. Need to map defects into 3D CAD files. Need software to be more user-friendly for front-line engineers. Need to quantify material processing parameters accurately.
Use physics-based design tool to account for warping [see Convergent Manufacturing Technologies, Inc]. Need to quantify material parameters accurately.
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Issues
Better control than a canned time/temperature profile. Need user-friendly systems to install in production molds. Need accurate material characterization. Need affordable systems. Avoid manual data logging. RFID is being applied to insure that material is used on time. Reduce energy consumption and capital expense of pressure vessel. Need materials designed for vacuum-only cure cycles. Resins typically need multi-hour cure cycles. This requires multiple molds and curing systems for highrate production. High viscosity, short pot life Advanced cure cycles sum up the viscosity dips Port configuration thru-thickness flow Combination - sequential porting
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Roctool
Induction heating is used to selectively heat the mold for rapid cycling and low energy use compared to conventional heating. This is used for RTM with dry preforms and compression molding with prepregs. Size: custom-designed.
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Mold
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This is a reconfigurable mold that uses a liquid/particle media contained by a membrane that solidifies against a master shape. The media can be re-liquified and re-solidified, and can potentially be sculpted to net shape with a CNC machine. Molds up to several feet on a side by 2 feet deep have been delivered.
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Net-Shape Weaving
Net shape contoured weaving has been demonstrated by Shape3, but has not been in high rate production. To cure the final composite a process such as VARI would be used. http://shape3.com/
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Composites are cured without heat in a radiation-shielded accelerator. The beam is scanned over the entire part. Only resins designed for e-beam cure can be used. Molds can be made from wood or rigid foam. see www.acsion.com
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Chopper/sprayer
Chopped, tackified fiber is sprayed onto a porous vacuum form with a CNC robot. The preform then goes into an RTM mold for resin injection and cure. This reduces labor content and increases deposition speed compared to hand layup. Somewhat lower mechanical properties result than with continuous fibers.
Vacuum mold
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Mix Resin
reaction kinetics chemical eq's
Raw Materials
Demold
Machining remove material relieve stress residual deformation geometry, coupled diff e's remove constraints relieve stress residual deformation geometry, coupled diff e's
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CAD Tools
Not all CAD tools can easily handle composite ply information. Here are some that do:
Features
NX [formerly UG] CATIA
Has fabric draping features and micromechanics calculator. Dassault product, has fabric draping, integration between design/analysis/ manufacturing.
Web Site
www.plm.automation.siemens.com
www.3ds.com
Pro-E
www.ptc.com
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Web Site
www.ansys.com www.mscsoftware.com www.plm.automation.siemens.com www.simulia.com/products/abaqus_fea
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Vacuum Infusion
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Features
Web Site
RTM-Worx
Resin flow
www.polyworx.com
Composite Cure Springback COMPRO Plug-in to ABAQUS and MARC, calculates residual stresses and springback due to resin cure. Point solutions for resin cure can be obtained using their Raven package. www.convergent.ca/products/compro%203d/ overview.html
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Simulations can be done to account for this; to design the mold surface properly in the first place.
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B
B A A Flat Pattern
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Draped on Hemisphere
Features
Web Site
Laminate Tools
Simulayt
PAM-RTM/Quickform
Part of PAM-RTM.
European effort to model fabric unit cells, fabric draping, RTM flow and structural response.
www.itool.eu 80
Type
Filament Winding
Entec CADWIND
Features
Models tensioned fibers on a rotating mandrel. Models tensioned fibers on a rotating mandrel. Can model various machines. Can model various machines.
Web Site
www.entec.com/ www.material.be/filament-windingsoftware www.cgtech.com www.compositepro.com/Fipes.html
Auto Tape Laying, Auto Fiber Placement Vericut Fiber Placement Expert System ACES
http://cinmach.magias.com/products/automatedcomposites-processing/aces
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Features
Composite Pro
Calculator to determine stiffness properties of laminates, and structural response of simple shapes.
Calculator to determine stiffness properties of laminates. Will be adding textile composites. Calculator to determine stiffness properties of textile composites. Determine stiffness properties of textile composites Calculator to determine stiffness properties of laminates, and structural response of simple shapes. Calculator to determine stiffness properties of laminates
Web Site
www.compositepro.com
Helius
www.fireholetech.com
Sysply
www.esigroup.com/products/compositesplastics/sysply 82
www.ccat.us
www.ccm.udel.edu www.udri.udayton.edu
www.wpafb.af.mil/afrl/rx
www.nasa.gov/centers/langley/home/index www.nasa.gov/centers/glenn/home/index www.compositecenter.org http://cmtc.scra.org/about_cmtc.shtml www.niar.wichita.edu/researchlabs/comp_ov erview.asp
www.ncms.org
http://cmtc.scra.org/tcc_overview.shtml
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www.sme.org
www.agfm.com/Initiativ es/CIACP.htm
www.asccomposites.org
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