| Literature DB >> 29301222 |
Christian Pommer1, Michael Sinapius2.
Abstract
The increasing use of composite materials has led to a greater demand for efficient curing cycles to reduce costs and speed up production cycles in manufacturing. One method to achieve this goal is in-line cure monitoring to determine the exact curing time. This article proposes a novel method through which to monitor the curing process inside closed tools by employing ultrasonic spectroscopy. A simple experiment is used to demonstrate the change in the ultrasonic spectrum during the cure cycle of an epoxy. The results clearly reveal a direct correlation between the amplitude and state of cure. The glass transition point is indicated by a global minimum of the reflected amplitude.Entities:
Keywords: cure monitoring; resonant ultrasonic spectroscopy; ultrasonic
Year: 2017 PMID: 29301222 PMCID: PMC5796376 DOI: 10.3390/s18010096
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sensors (Basel) ISSN: 1424-8220 Impact factor: 3.576
Figure 1Different resonance types below the actuator. (symmetric, left; anti-symmetric, right).
Number of irrelevant, partially- or fully-relevant papers, as well as papers that display ultrasonic cure monitoring, but with a pulsed ultrasonic approach. The first 500 search results are sorted by relevance to the search terms “ultrasonic/ultrasound”, “cure”, “monitoring” and “resonant”.
| Irrelevant | Pulsed Ultrasonic | Fully/Partially Relevant | Inaccessible |
|---|---|---|---|
| 464 | 32 | 2 | 1 |
Number of irrelevant, partially- or fully-relevant papers, as well as papers that display ultrasonic cure monitoring, but with a pulsed ultrasonic approach, with respect to the search terms “ultrasound spectroscopy” and “cure monitoring”.
| Irrelevant | Pulsed Ultrasonic | Fully/Partially Relevant | Inaccessible |
|---|---|---|---|
| 30 | 0 | 1 | 0 |
Figure 2Test setup and principle for ultrasonic spectroscopy cure monitoring of the epoxy RTM 6with a piezoelectric actuator and a piezoelectric sensor.
Figure 3Change in the response spectrum during curing over time.
Figure 4Measured temperature (black-dotted line) and calculated degree of cure (blue line) of the epoxy during the experiment with added support lines (in red) to determine the glass transition point (intersection). The mean spectrum amplitude of Figure 3 is shown in the green-dashed line.
Figure 5FEM vibration analysis of 80,300-Hz amplified excitation at different phase angles with a 1-mm ring element-size; center left-plate continues to the right. (a) 0; (b) 45; (c) 90; (d) 135; (e) 180.