Abstract

Composite frames in aerospace applications often show a lack of dimensional fidelity, which creates the necessity of costly shimming efforts within final assembly lines. A numerical study on C-profile frames has been performed to examine the mechanisms inducing these distortions. The paper shows that distortions are directly related to the composite’s material architecture, the part geometry and interestingly also to the state of the art zone-based frame design philosophy applied today. The paper shows that frame distortions arise from the 3D orthotropic nature of composite laminates, in-plane CTE inhomogeneity of laminate zones and coupling of different part areas. The main mechanisms inducing frame distortions are deduced from the numerical models. The paper also shows that trimming operations, which are necessary to bring frames from the manufactured to the engineered shape, significantly affect the frames’ final distortion state, the internal residual stress level as well as corresponding assembly forces during assembly.

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