Curved Preform and Method of Making Thereof
20210189612 · 2021-06-24
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
International classification
Abstract
Disclosed is an apparatus and method for forming three-dimensional woven preforms that can be curved and have continuous fibers in the direction of curvature. Also disclosed are woven preforms formed thereby.
Claims
1. A curved woven preform comprising: a plurality of weft fibers; a plurality of warp fibers interwoven with the plurality of weft fibers to form a base of the preform; wherein the base of the preform is curved with the warp fibers continuous across the length of the preform and some of the warp fibers are longer than other warp fibers.
2. The curved woven preform of claim 1, wherein curvature of the woven preform is convex, the length of the warp fibers being greater towards an outside of the curve of the preform than towards an inside of the curve of the preform.
3. The curved woven preform of claim 1, comprising: at least one leg integrally woven with the base and curved along a length of the base, wherein warp fibers forming the at least one leg are greater towards an outside curve of the at least one leg than towards an inside curve of the at least one leg.
4. The curved woven preform of claim 1, wherein curvature of the woven preform is concave, the length of the warp fibers being shorter towards an outside of the curve of the preform than towards an inside of the curve of the preform.
5. The curved woven preform of claim 1, comprising: at least one leg integrally woven with the base and curved along a length of the base, wherein warp fibers forming the at least one leg are shorter towards an outside curve of the at least one leg than towards an inside curve of the at least one leg.
6. A clamp comprising: an upper clamp; and a lower clamp mateable with the upper clamp, wherein the upper clamp has a complementary shape to mate with the lower clamp and configured to receive a fabric therebetween.
7. A shaping clamp system comprising: two or more clamps, each clamp having an upper clamp portion and a lower clamp portion and an integral connecting portion, wherein the two or more clamps are connectable to one another by the connecting portion and configured to receive a fabric therebetween.
8. A clamp comprising: an upper clamp having a blade portion; and a lower clamp separable and mateable with the upper portion, the lower clamp having a lower clamp first part and a lower clamp second part, wherein the lower clamp first and second parts have a gap therebetween such that the blade portion of the upper clamp enters into the gap when the upper and lower clamps are mated together.
9. A shaping clamp system comprising: two or more clamps, each clamp having an upper clamp portion with a blade portion and a lower clamp portion, each clamp including an integral connecting portion, wherein each lower clamp is separable and mateable with a respective upper clamp, the lower clamp having a lower clamp first part and a lower clamp second part with a gap therebetween to receive the blade portion when the upper clamp and lower clamp are mated together, wherein the two or more clamps are connectable to one another by the connecting portion and configured to receive a fabric therebetween.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0019] The accompanying drawings, which are included to provide a further understanding of the invention, are incorporated in and constitute a part of this specification. The drawings presented herein illustrate different embodiments of the invention and together with the description serve to explain the principles of the invention. In the drawings:
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0030] Terms “comprising” and “comprises” in this disclosure can mean “including” and “includes” or can have the meaning commonly given to the term “comprising” or “comprises” in U.S. Patent Law. Terms “consisting essentially of” or “consists essentially of” if used in the claims have the meaning ascribed to them in U.S. Patent Law. Other aspects of the invention are described in or are obvious from (and within the ambit of the invention) the following disclosure.
[0031] The terms “threads”, “fibers”, “tows”, and “yarns” are used interchangeably in the following description. “Threads”, “fibers”, “tows”, and “yarns” as used herein can refer to monofilaments, multifilament yarns, twisted yarns, multifilament tows, textured yarns, braided tows, coated yarns, bicomponent yarns, as well as yarns made from stretch broken fibers of any materials known to those ordinarily skilled in the art. Yarns can be made of carbon, nylon, rayon, fiberglass, cotton, ceramic, aramid, polyester, metal, polyethylene glass, and/or other materials that exhibit desired physical, thermal, chemical or other properties.
[0032] The term “folded” is broadly used herein to mean “forming,” which includes unfolding, bending, and other such terms for manipulating the shape of a fabric.
[0033] For a better understanding of the invention, its advantages and objects attained by its uses, reference is made to the accompanying descriptive matter in which non-limiting embodiments of the invention are illustrated in the accompanying drawings and in which corresponding components are identified by the same reference numerals.
[0034] Disclosed is a method for creating curved preforms of continuous fiber on a conventional straight loom take-up. Machine woven fabrics are created using a loom that includes a weaving mechanism coupled with a method for advancing and collecting the finished fabric. “Straight take-up” means the fabric is collected in the warp or machine direction (MD) in short lengths adapted for weaving discrete preforms.
[0035] Typical shapes woven with the straight take-up include Pi-shaped or T-shaped preforms used as structural reinforcement members in a variety of applications. These shapes being made of continuous fiber in both the warp and weft directions can be difficult to form into a geometry or curved shape in the warp or take-up direction.
[0036] As an example,
[0037] The T-preform fabric includes base portions 102a, 102b and leg portion 104. A root 110 of leg portion 104 may be interwoven with base portions 102a, 102b. Base portions 102a, 102b are not interwoven at their intersection 114 and the remainder of the leg portion 104 is not interwoven with the base portions other than at their intersection 110. The T-preform fabric 100 is woven and advances toward and onto the take-up roll. Once a desired length L of the T-preform fabric is woven, the fabric may be removed from the loom. Base portions 102a, 102b, and leg portion 104 can be folded to form T-preform 120.
[0038] Other preform shapes including, but not limited to, Pi, H, O, and I can be woven and folded into their final form as known to those of ordinary skill. Any of the preforms can be impregnated with a matrix material to form a composite.
[0039]
[0040] Base portions 202a, 202b and leg portion 204 are woven from warp fibers 222. As shown in
[0041] While curved preforms are known in the art, these prior-art preforms required cutting of fibers or making the length from discontinuous short fibers, such as stretch broken fibers, to enable the preform to be stretched or curved to provide additional length of the preform towards the outside of the curvature as compared with towards the inside of the curvature. There is a weakening, a loss of strength, of the preform due to the cutting and/or discontinuity of the fibers in providing the additional length.
[0042] In contrast, the present disclosure provides preforms and a process for weaving preforms with additional length of fibers so the finished structure can be curved and have continuous fiber reinforcement in the direction of the curvature. Continuous fibers provide greater preform strength than discontinuous fibers. “Continuous fibers” are fibers having no breaks along the entire length of the fabric. In embodiments of the present disclosure, the fibers of the fabric are continuous in the direction of curvature of the preform and can have varying lengths across the width of the fabric. The varying lengths across the preform fabric width enable forming a curved portion in the length of the fabric without cutting the fibers or having the fibers discontinuous to form the curved portion.
[0043] For the purposes of this disclosure, the direction of curvature of the preform will be assumed to be along the warp or machine direction (MD) of the fabric. However, it is contemplated that the disclosed technique may be used to effect curvature of the fabric in the weft or cross-machine direction (CD) alone or in combination with the warp direction.
[0044] To create this curvature, according to an embodiment of the present disclosure, the length of the fibers in upright leg 204 is made longer towards the outside tip 224 of the preform upright leg than the inside root 226 of the preform leg by applying one or more clamps to the fabric as the fabric comes off of the loom. The clamps may be applied in the fell of the cloth. The shape of the clamps is designed to draw additional fiber length into the preform to accommodate an increase in length of the fibers to enable curvature of the preform when the preform is formed to the desired shape.
[0045] In embodiments of the instant invention, each clamp incrementally increases the length of the warp fibers corning off the loom. In the clamp depicted in
[0046] It is contemplated that the preform fabric can be made concave as illustrated in the examples of
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[0048] The clamps are typically assembled on the preform fabric in sets. Each set of clamps includes two or more clamps having mating geometries. The clamping action of sandwiching the preform fabric between the set of clamps draws additional fiber take-up length through the loom. The clamp set geometries are tapered such that the take-up length increases from the root (inside curve of the preform) to the tip of an upright leg(s) (outside curve of the preform) for a preform with convex curvature (reversed clamp geometry for a preform with concave curvature). The increase in length of the fibers can enable forming of the preform fabric into the curved preform of
[0049] The geometry of a clamp shown in
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[0054] The blade portion for a convex preform has a geometry to cause a lengthening of fabric fibers when applied. In an embodiment, the blade portion is more pronounced or bigger toward the center 704 than toward the end 706 of the blade portion. That is, the blade portion is shaped to cause the fibers of the preform fabric to be longer to traverse the distance towards the more pronounced center of the blade than around the ends of the blade. As discussed above, the geometry of the blade portion would be opposite for a concave preform so that the fibers of the preform fabric will be shorter to traverse a distance towards a less pronounced center of the blade than around the ends of the blade.
[0055] A force F is applied to urge the upper and lower clamps together. As shown in
[0056] While
[0057] Once the required fabric length is woven and the preform fabric is removed from the loom, any remaining clamps can be removed and the preform fabric shaped to the final configuration. In any of the embodiments, the final configuration can be impregnated with a matrix material. The matrix material includes epoxy, bismaleimide, polyester, vinyl-ester, ceramic, carbon, and other such materials known to those of ordinary skill in the art.
[0058] Other embodiments are within the scope of the following claims.