Abstract

Porosity is an unavoidable defect in carbon fiber reinforced polymers and has noticeable effects on mechanical properties since gas filled voids weaken the epoxy matrix. Pulsed thermography is advantageous because it is a non-contacting, non-destructive and fast photothermal testing method that allows the estimation of material parameters. Using the Virtual Wave Concept for thermography data, ultrasonic evaluation methods are applicable. In this work, the pulse-echo method for Time-of-Flight measurements is used, whereby the determined Time-of-Flight is directly related to the thermal diffusion time of the examined material. We introduce a signal-to-noise dependent approach, the optimum evaluation time, for evaluating only relevant time ranges which contain information of heat diffusion. After the validation of the method for heterogeneous materials, effective medium theories can be used for quantitative porosity estimation from the estimated diffusion time. This model-based approach for porosity estimation delivers more accurate results for transmission and reflection configuration measurements compared to thermographic state-of-the-art methods. The results are validated by X-ray computed tomography reference measurements on a wide range of different porous carbon fiber reinforced plastic specimens with different number of plies and varying porosity contents.

Highlights

  • Porosity is an unavoidable defect in carbon fiber reinforced plastic (CFRP)

  • The Virtual Wave Concept (VWC) is applied on different CFRP coupons for porosity estimation

  • Based on an effective medium theory (EMT), porosity values can be derived, which are validated with 3D X-ray computed tomography measurements

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Summary

Introduction

Porosity is an unavoidable defect in carbon fiber reinforced plastic (CFRP). It is caused by the formation of air-filled voids during the manufacturing process. The autoclave molding of preimpregnated fibers (prepreg fabrics or unidirectional tapes) is a critical step in manufacturing. Enclosed air during the lay-up and insufficient hydrostatic pressure results to keep any moisture or volatiles dissolved in the resin until gelation occurs [1].

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Virtual Wave Concept
Discretization
Regularization with Prior Information
Estimation of the Thermal Diffusion Time
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Optimum Evaluation Time
Virtual A-scan Representation
Virtual Time-of-Flight Measurements
Results for validation
Results
Reference Measurements on a CFRP Step Wedge
Pulsed-Thermography Set-Up
Test Specimen
Measurement Parameters
Results for Validation of the Method
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Effective Medium Theory
Results of Porosity Estimation
Conclusion and Outlook
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Full Text
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