Abstract

AbstractIn the process of preparing textile composites by resin transfer molding (RTM) method, both the upper and lower surface of the mold will interact with the composite parts due to the mismatch of thermal expansion coefficient between the mold and the part, resulting in warpage deformation. To address this key technical problem, this article first studied the effect of mold on the warpage deformation of composite material under different fiber volume fractions. Then a mold–part interaction modeling method for RTM process with nonthermoelastic deformation is proposed. By introducing shear layers between the upper and lower surfaces of the mold and the composite part, a finite element simulation model for predicting the curing deformation of the component is established and experimentally verified. The results show that the effect of mold–part interaction on the warpage deformation of the composite decreases with increasing fiber volume fraction. Meanwhile, the proposed modeling method can avoid complete material characterization, and the comparison between experimental and simulation results proves that the model can accurately simulate the curing deformation of composite components under the same process conditions. Finally, the analysis reveals that the interaction caused by thermal mismatch between the composites and the mold is less related to the intermediate layup, but mainly related to the fiber orientation of the layup layer in contact with the mold.Highlights The warpage deformation law of the mold on the composites with different fiber volume fractions is investigated. A mold–part interaction modeling method for a resin transfer molding process with nonthermoelastic deformation is proposed, where the mold stretching effect is represented by the cumulative effect of the interaction between the two layers on the upper and lower surfaces of the part.

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