Abstract

Thermal analysis plays a key role in the design of hybrid manufacturing processes of High-Performance Thermoplastic Composites (HP-TPC) parts. Indeed, an inadequate temperature distribution, during the transformation of these materials, could not only lead to mechanical and surface defects but also to inefficient energy consumption. These problems become difficult to avoid with the interaction of different materials within the part, and also with the influence of subsequent stages on the process. To overcome this challenge, the methodology proposed in this work aims to determine the spatial and temporal distribution of the heat sources that must be applied at each sequential stage of a process to reach a thermal objective within the part. The methodology is based on the concept of conformal cooling [1]. A surface enveloping the part is created [2]. Once a computational model is set up, the optimization problem is treated as an inverse problem subjected to constraints that depend on the process response in terms of temperature cycles. Thus, it requires the calculation of the direct problem, the adjoint-state solution, and the development of the sensitivity equations to implement a first-order gradient-based algorithm. As an application example, a thermo-stamping of HP-TPC with a metal insert followed by an over-molding process has been chosen because of the different stages and materials involved. The first results show a reduction of temperature gradients on the part surface at each stage while arriving at the established temperature level. Further analysis will include a constraint problem taking into account adhesion and/or energy criteria.

Highlights

  • Stamping associated with over-molding process combines several manufacturing techniques to create parts with integrated functions

  • This study proposes a design methodology that takes into account all the stages of a thermo-stamping of highperformance thermoplastic composites with a metal insert followed by an over- molding

  • The sensitivity analysis helps in the determination of the deepest descent

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Stamping associated with over-molding process combines several manufacturing techniques to create parts with integrated functions This approach is advantageous in aeronautics and automotive applications to reduce production time, by avoiding secondary operations, and to fabricate hybrid lightweight structures combining metals, composites, and polymers according to their final purpose. To avoid the aforementioned problems, it becomes mandatory to have a thermal design methodology that takes into account the main stages of a manufacturing process, and other challenging aspects like geometry complexity or interaction between different assembly materials at each manufacturing stage. This study proposes a design methodology that takes into account all the stages of a thermo-stamping of highperformance thermoplastic composites with a metal insert followed by an over- molding. As a replacement for the mold part, is created with a distance of 15 mm as proposed by Agazzi [2] and Hopmaan [13]

Process conditions
Computational formulation
Optimization strategy
Design variable
Objective function
Sensitivity analysis
Optimization Algorithm
Optimization block 1
Optimization block 2
Optimization block 3
Cycle evolution
Conclusions
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call