Production of Continuous Fiber Thermoplastic Composites by in-situ Pultrusion

被引:13
|
作者
Epple, S. [1 ]
Bonten, C. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Stuttgart, Inst Kunststofftech, Stuttgart, Germany
来源
PROCEEDINGS OF PPS-29: THE 29TH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE OF THE POLYMER - CONFERENCE PAPERS | 2014年 / 1593卷
关键词
In-situ pultrusion; anionic polymerization; continuous glass fibers; fiber reinforced plastics; polyamide; 6;
D O I
10.1063/1.4873820
中图分类号
O59 [应用物理学];
学科分类号
摘要
The constructive design in the automotive industry, but also in many other industrial sectors has changed steadily over the past decades. It became much more complex due to e. g. increased use of hybrid materials. Combined with the desire to minimize the weight of vehicles and thus the CO2 emissions, the use of low density materials and especially fiber-reinforced plastics is increasing. E. g. Continuous fiber thermoplastic composites are used to reinforce injection molded parts. Low viscosity monomers like caprolactam, which is used to produce polyamide 6 by anionic polymerization are able to easily impregnate and penetrate the textile reinforcement. After wetting the fibers, the ring-opening polymerization starts and the matrix is becoming a polymer. At IKT, a method based on the RIM process (reaction injection molding) was developed to produce continuous fiber thermoplastic composites with high contents of continuous glass fibers. The anionic polymerization of polyamide 6 was now combined with the pultrusion process. Continuous glass fibers are pulled through a mold and wetted with caprolactam (including activator and catalyst). After the material polymerized in the mould, the finished continuous fiber thermoplastic composites can be pulled out and is finally sawn off.
引用
收藏
页码:454 / 457
页数:4
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Thermoplastic pultrusion of natural fibre reinforced composites
    Van de Velde, K
    Kiekens, P
    COMPOSITE STRUCTURES, 2001, 54 (2-3) : 355 - 360
  • [22] Thermoplastic pultrusion of recycled PET matrix composites
    Tucci, Fausto
    Rubino, Felice
    Esperto, Vitantonio
    Carlone, Pierpaolo
    MATERIAL FORMING, ESAFORM 2024, 2024, 41 : 422 - 429
  • [23] Pultrusion of Bendable Continuous Fibers Reinforced Composites With Reactive Acrylic Thermoplastic ELIUM® Resin
    Zoller, Alexander
    Escale, Pierre
    Gerard, Pierre
    FRONTIERS IN MATERIALS, 2019, 6
  • [24] High speed pultrusion of thermoplastic matrix composites
    Miller, AH
    Dodds, N
    Hale, JM
    Gibson, AG
    COMPOSITES PART A-APPLIED SCIENCE AND MANUFACTURING, 1998, 29 (07) : 773 - 782
  • [25] Fiber bundle deposition model and variable speed printing strategy for in-situ impregnation 3D printing of continuous fiber reinforced thermoplastic composites
    Quan, Zhenzhen
    Liu, Cheng
    Li, Junjie
    Qin, Xiaohong
    Yu, Jianyong
    COMPOSITES SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY, 2024, 255
  • [26] Pultrusion System of Continuous Fiber Reinforced Thermoplastic Composite with Braiding Techniqueaa8
    Hatano, D.
    Tanaka, Y.
    Takagi, M.
    Ohtani, A.
    Nakai, A.
    Matubara, S.
    RECENT ADVANCES IN TEXTILE COMPOSITES, 2010, : 110 - +
  • [27] Grid stiffened panel made by Automated Fiber Placement (AFP) in-situ consolidation of thermoplastic composites
    Schmidt, Raphael
    Zacherl, Lorenz
    Shadmehri, Farjad
    Rother, Klemens
    MANUFACTURING LETTERS, 2024, 40 : 136 - 139
  • [28] PROCESSING SCIENCE OF CONTINUOUS FIBER REINFORCED THERMOPLASTIC COMPOSITES
    COGSWELL, FN
    LEACH, DC
    SAMPE JOURNAL, 1988, 24 (03) : 11 - 14
  • [29] Melt impregnation behavior and mechanical properties of long fiber thermoplastic composites through pultrusion process
    Lee, JS
    Lee, JW
    ANTEC '96: PLASTICS - RACING INTO THE FUTURE, VOLS I-III: VOL I: PROCESSING; VOL II: MATERIALS; VOL III: SPACIAL AREAS, 1996, 42 : 2536 - 2540
  • [30] Pultrusion of thermoplastic composites - New developments and modelling studies
    Bechtold, G
    Wiedmer, S
    Friedrich, K
    JOURNAL OF THERMOPLASTIC COMPOSITE MATERIALS, 2002, 15 (05) : 443 - 465