Abstract
The anisotropic material behavior of continuous-fiber-reinforced composites that is evident in their mechanical properties should also be considered in their processing. An important step in the processing of thermoplastic unidirectional (UD) fiber-reinforced tapes is consolidation, where a layup consisting of locally welded UD tape layers is firmly bonded. Compression of the molten thermoplastic matrix material during consolidation leads to a squeeze flow, the direction of which is determined by the fibers. This work presents a model that describes the influence of fiber direction on compression and flow behavior, implemented in the computational fluid dynamics (CFD) software tool OpenFOAM®. To validate the simulation results, we performed experiments in a laboratory consolidation unit, capturing the squeeze flow with cameras and then quantifying it by gray-scale analysis. The specimens used were UD polycarbonate tapes (44% carbon fibers by volume) of various sizes and with various fiber directions. The simulation allows prediction of the changes in specimen geometry during consolidation and is a first step towards optimizing the process by avoiding extensive squeeze flow.
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