High strength mechanical fastening inclusions for fiber reinforced polymer structures
11760043 · 2023-09-19
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
B23K20/10
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B32B3/266
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29K2705/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B32B2250/44
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C70/68
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B32B15/20
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C70/72
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B32B2250/42
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B32B2262/106
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B32B15/14
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B32B2260/021
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
F16B37/048
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16B5/02
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
B29C70/68
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B23K20/10
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C70/02
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C70/72
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B32B15/14
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
F16B37/04
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Abstract
A fastening inclusion is provided and includes a hard point made of coalesced metal sheets, metal or fiber flanges extending from edges of the hard point, and a fastener arranged on the hard point. The fastening inclusion can be incorporated into a fiber reinforced polymer structure by interleaving the flanges with fiber reinforced resin plies, and then curing the fiber reinforced plies to form a composite structure. The fastener on the hard point may be used for mechanically connecting the composite structure to a separate component, such as a metal component on a vehicle.
Claims
1. A method of making a composite structure, comprising: coalescing a stack of metal sheets to form a hard point and a stack of flanges extending out from an edge of the hard point; interleaving uncured fiber reinforced resin plies between the flanges extending out from the edge of the hard point; and curing the fiber reinforced resin plies to bind the fiber reinforced resin plies to the flanges extending out from the edge of the hard point; wherein coalescing includes solid state welding of the metal sheets.
2. The method of claim 1, wherein the solid state welding includes ultrasonic welding of the metal sheets.
3. The method of claim 1, wherein the flanges are formed by portions of the metal sheets that have not been coalesced.
4. The method of claim 1, wherein: the method further includes before coalescing, interleaving fiber layers between the metal sheets; the fiber layers are embedded in the hard point by coalescing; and ends of the fiber layers extend out from the edge of the hard point to thereby define the flanges extending out from the edge of the hard point.
5. The method of claim 1, further comprising arranging a fastener on the hard point.
6. The method of claim 5, wherein the fastener includes a hole extending through the hard point.
7. The method of claim 5, wherein the fastener includes a threaded nut.
8. The method of claim 5, wherein the fastener includes a threaded bolt.
9. The method of claim 5, further comprising attaching a metal component to the fastener.
10. A method of making a composite structure, comprising: coalescing a stack of metal sheets to form a hard point and a stack of flanges extending out from an edge of the hard point; interleaving uncured fiber reinforced resin plies between the flanges extending out from the edge of the hard point; and curing the fiber reinforced resin plies to bind the fiber reinforced resin plies to the flanges extending out from the edge of the hard point; wherein the flanges are formed by portions of the metal sheets that have not been coalesced.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(11) The present subject matter involves integrating a laminated metal structure, herein referred to as a fastening inclusion, into a fiber reinforced polymer structure prior to curing the fiber reinforced polymer structure. The fastening inclusion includes a hard point used for joining the fiber reinforced polymer structure, via a mechanical fastener, to a separate component. The fastening inclusion may be constructed using Ultrasonic Additive Manufacturing (UAM) or another suitable method to coalesce, out of a plurality of metal sheets, a single component including a stack of flanges extending our from an edge of the hard point. The flanges are utilized by being interleaved with a plurality of uncured fiber reinforced resin plies. The fiber reinforced resin plies are cured to form a composite structure, which comprises a fiber reinforced polymer structure and the hard point. Interleaving multiple flanges from the fastening inclusion within the fiber reinforced resin plies results in a strong adhesive joint between the fastening inclusion and the fiber reinforced polymer structure. Additionally, engagement of fibers from the resin plies in the load path of the fastening inclusion transfers loads from the fastening inclusion to the fiber reinforced polymer structure to contribute to joint strength.
(12) If UAM is used to create the hard point, it is possible to embed fibers within the metal coalesced region of the hard point such that the fibers stick out of the hard point and can be utilized as the flanges for interleaving with the fiber reinforced resin plies.
(13) Fasteners can be integrated with the hard point through various techniques, such as projection welding or UAM. This is done before or after integrating the hard point into the fiber reinforced polymer structure. If the hard point is thick enough, a threaded hole can be formed in the hard point itself, eliminating the need for an additional fastener and reducing the hard point profile. Forming threads in the hard point after curing allows for less scrap due to out-of-tolerance joining points. The fastener could also be a threaded stud to make a similarly low profile external threaded hard point. The hard point may be used with a through hole and a separate mechanical fastener for joining the composite structure with a separate component under wider dimensional tolerances.
(14) Referring now to the figures, a composite structure including a high strength mechanical fastening inclusion in a fiber reinforced polymer structure is prepared by arranging a stack 2 of metal sheets 4 one on top of another as depicted in
(15) As used herein, “hard point” means a coalesced portion of the metal sheets 4. By “coalesce” or cognate terms, it is meant that the individual metal sheets 4 are merged together so as to form one mass by the use of fusion welding or solid state welding. In fusion welding, the metal base material of the metal sheets 4 is melted by means of the application of heat. The melted base material from one metal sheet 4 mixes with melted metal from other metal sheets 4 such that upon cooling, a bond is formed between metal sheets 4. Suitable fusion welding techniques include, but are not limited to, arc welding, resistance welding including resistance spot welding (RSW), oxyfuel welding, electron beam welding and laser beam welding.
(16) In solid state welding, the joining of metal sheets 4 takes place without melting of the base metal. Solid state welding is welding which produces coalescence of joined pieces at temperatures essentially below the melting point of the base materials being joined, without the addition of filler metal. Increased temperatures above ambient may or may not be used. Solid state welding includes, but is not limited to, cold welding, diffusion welding, explosion welding, forge welding, friction welding, hot pressure welding, roll welding, and ultrasonic welding. In the case of metal sheets 4, these are coalesced by application of one or more of pressure, vibration, and heat.
(17) The metal sheets 4 may be coalesced via Ultrasonic Additive Manufacturing (UAM), which is ultrasonic welding of metal sheets 4 to one another, to form an ultrasonic welded hard point 6. UAM is a solid-state (i.e. no melting) metal welding process, which provides fully dense, gapless three dimensional parts. In the ultrasonic welding process, an ultrasonic welder may be used, which includes a sonotrode (e.g. a horn) driven by one or more piezoelectric transducers to impart ultrasonic vibrations under a compressive force to metal parts to be joined. The sonotrode operates at a vibration frequency of about 20 kHz (nominal) that is transverse to the metal parts to create plastic deformation between the metal parts being welded. When two metal parts are being ultrasonically welded, vibrations imparted by the sonotrode on the metal parts, along with a static compressive force, cause a metallurgical bond to form between the two metal parts. Process temperatures are low, typically below 150° C., and thus inhibit the formation of brittle intermetallics, inhibit altering the microstructure of the metals, and inhibit heat-induced distortion or property degradation of the metals.
(18) Ultrasonic welding is useful for coalescing the metal sheets 4 because it is a low temperature process, meaning that it will not alter the effect of prior heat treatments or the microstructure of the metal sheets 4 on a meso- or macro-scale, and is able to join dissimilar metal materials without formation of adverse intermetallic compounds. Ultrasonic welding produces a continuous hermetic bond at the joint between two metal sheets 4. As will be discussed in more detail, ultrasonic welding can be used for embedding fibers between the metal sheets 4 such that they are embedded within the hard point 6 to act as flanges 10.
(19) The thickness of the metal sheets 4 is not particularly limited, and may each be for example, 0.05-5 mm thick, 0.75-3.5 mm thick, 0.1-2.0 mm thick, 0.9-1.1 mm thick, or 1.0±0.05 mm thick. The number of metal sheets 4 is not particularly limited, and 2-50, 5-40, 7-30, 10-20, 14-16, or 15 metal sheets 4 may be coalesced to form the hard point 6. The thickness T.sub.1 (
(20) In one non-limiting embodiment, the flanges 10 may be formed from portions of the metal sheets 4 that have not been coalesced. With particular reference to
(21) Between
(22) With particular reference to
(23) As depicted in
(24) With reference to
(25) In a non-limiting example, the fiber reinforced polymer structure 22 includes a first type of plies 26A and a second type of plies 26B. Plies 26A extend between the flanges 10, while plies 26B are arranged between plies 26A and abut ends of the flanges 10. Plies 26B have a thickness similar to the thickness of the flanges 10 and are used to space apart plies 26A so that the fiber reinforced polymer structure 22 has a thickness T.sub.2 similar to the thickness T.sub.1 of the hard point 6, which is the thickness of the fastening inclusion 20. The thickness T.sub.1 of the hard point 6 can match the thickness T.sub.2, thus allowing for use of the fastening inclusion 20 in a fiber reinforced composite structure having any thickness T.sub.2.
(26) The fastening inclusion 20 may be surrounded by the fiber reinforced polymer structure 22, or the fastening inclusion 20 may be located at an edge of the fiber reinforced polymer structure 22.
(27) A fastener 28 may be arranged on the hard point 6 for use in connecting the composite structure 24 to a separate component 36, such as a metal frame member in a vehicle for example. The fastener 28 is not particularly limited, and may include a nut, a bolt, eyelet, a clasp, a screw, a post, a rivet, a bracket, a wedge, a clip, or the like.
(28) The fastener 28 may be arranged on the hard point 6 either before or after the fastening inclusion 20 is incorporated into a fiber reinforced polymer structure 22. This configuration integrates a mechanical fastener 28 in the hard point 6 and not within the fiber reinforced polymer structure 22. As such, the fastener 28 is integrated without adversely affecting the strength of the fiber reinforced polymer structure 22 by way of crack initiation or propagation associated with conventional systems. This greatly reduces or eliminates the need for the fiber reinforced polymer structure 22 to be designed with a knock-down factor.
(29) With reference to
(30) In an alternative embodiment, a nut 32 is not included. In one aspect, the through hole 30 is itself threaded and can therefore threadingly engage the bolt 38. In this aspect, the hard point 6 may have a thickness T.sub.1 that is great enough such that a nut 32 is not necessary, and a threaded through hole 30 may be formed in the hard point 6 since the hard point 6 is robust enough to properly engage with an associate bolt 32. In another aspect, a nut is separate and distinct from the hard point 6, and is threadingly engaged to the bolt 24 on the side of the hard point 6 opposite from the component 36 to create a compression fitting around the hard point 6.
(31) With reference to
(32) As seen in
(33) The joint 46 between the composite structure 24 and the separate component 36 using the fastener 28 may be arranged differently. However, in each instance, the hard point 6 allows for a secure and sturdy joint 46 to be formed between the composite structure 24 and the separate component 36 since the hard point 6 comprises coalesced metal sheets 4 and is securely attached to the fiber reinforced polymer structure 22 by interleaving the flanges 10 with the fiber reinforced resin plies 26. The assembly 48 formed by joining the composite structure 24 and the separate component may be a vehicle assembly, for example. In one non-limiting example, the composite structure 24 comprises a vehicle outer panel and the separate component 36 comprises a metal component such as a vehicle frame member.
(34) The hard point 6 can be sized to accommodate variations in the manufacturing process such as a location variance on mating parts. This increases the tolerance of joint placement and reduces the scrap rate due to out-of-tolerance joint locations. The size of the fastening inclusion 20 and hard point 6 allows for an increased degree of manufacturing tolerance, since the fastener 28 can be attached to the hard point at a location that accurately mates with the associated fastener of the separate component 36. In other words, the hard point 6 may be sized such that the fastener 28 can be arranged on the hard point 6 at a location other than in the center of the hard point 6 as depicted in the figures, and instead can instead be arranged nearer to any edge of the hard point 6. In this regard and with reference to
(35) It will be appreciated that various of the above-disclosed and other features and functions, or alternatives or varieties thereof, may be desirably combined into many other different systems or applications. Also that various presently unforeseen or unanticipated alternatives, modifications, variations or improvements therein may be subsequently made by those skilled in the art which are also intended to be encompassed by the following claims.