Abstract
Oven vacuum bag processing is an emerging process to manufacture high quality thermoplastic parts with void reduction using vacuum consolidation only. This paper models void air removal as a combination of through-the-thickness gas diffusion and in-plane airflow through the interlayer region for a flat plate of finite in-plane dimensions consisting of an arbitrary number of layers. A finite difference model assumes Fickian diffusion, simplifies the microstructure of the multi-layer prepreg stack and allows evaluation of various material and process conditions (inter- and intra-layer void content, temperature and pressure cycle, etc.) on the through-thickness diffusion behavior of the volatiles. In-plane airflow in the intra-layer is modeled using Darcy’s flow and requires high permeability of the interface created by the porous volume in between adjacent layers and the ability to vent the gas at the part edge. The dual mechanism model evaluates part geometries and processing cycles to reduce void content equivalent to autoclave parts with previously generated material properties of AS4/APC2 carbon PEEK prepreg. The modeling results based on the proposed mechanism shows that processing with through-the-thickness diffusion and standard processing cycles limits part thickness to five layers or less for APC2 while in-plane gas reduction can be used to make large parts of up to 10 m in the in-plane direction independent of part thickness. Very large parts require the addition of an intermediate lower temperature dwell cycle where diffusivity is high but interlayer permeability is unaffected allowing gas flow to the part edges for an extended period of time. The edge vent approach ensures a robust process even for as received materials with significant void variability often seen in thermoplastic prepreg tapes.
Published Version
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