High-pressure tank fabrication method
10889051 ยท 2021-01-12
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
F17C2203/0604
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F17C2203/0665
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F17C2223/036
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F17C2223/0123
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
B29C70/86
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
F17C2221/012
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F17C2270/0168
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
B29C53/822
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
F17C1/16
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
B29C53/602
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
F17C2209/2154
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
B29C70/32
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
F17C2270/0184
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F17C2209/2118
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F17C2209/232
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F17C2201/0109
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
B29C70/48
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29K2063/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C70/547
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Y02E60/32
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
International classification
B29C53/60
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C70/32
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C70/86
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
A high-pressure tank fabrication method includes a pre-form fabrication step and a molding step. In the pre-form fabrication step a pre-form is fabricated by winding dry fiber bundles with different thicknesses (first fiber bundles and second fiber bundles) onto a liner in a state in which the dry fiber bundles with different thicknesses are made to be adjacent to one another. In the molding step, molding includes disposing the pre-form fabricated in the pre-form fabrication step in a mold and injecting resin.
Claims
1. A high-pressure tank fabrication method comprising: a pre-form fabrication step, including winding dry fiber bundles with different thicknesses onto a liner in a state in which the dry fiber bundles with different thicknesses are adjacent to one another; and a molding step, including disposing the pre-form fabricated in the pre-form fabrication step in a mold and injecting resin, wherein the pre-form fabrication step includes at least winding the dry fiber bundles with different thicknesses onto the liner by hoop winding in the state in which the dry fiber bundles with different thicknesses are adjacent to one another.
2. The high-pressure tank fabrication method according to claim 1, wherein the pre-form fabrication step includes forming a fiber layer of at least 20 layers on a trunk portion of the liner.
3. The high-pressure tank fabrication method according to claim 1, wherein: the pre-form fabrication step includes arraying at least three of the fiber bundles in a width direction and winding on the fiber bundles at a same time; and in every combination of two fiber bundles that are adjacent to one another among the at least three fiber bundles, the two fiber bundles differ in thickness from one another.
4. The high-pressure tank fabrication method according to claim 2, wherein: the pre-form fabrication step includes arraying at least three of the fiber bundles in a width direction and winding on the fiber bundles at a same time; and in every combination of two fiber bundles that are adjacent to one another among the at least three fiber bundles, the two fiber bundles differ in thickness from one another.
5. The high-pressure tank fabrication method according to claim 1, wherein: the pre-form fabrication step includes arraying at least three of the fiber bundles in a width direction and winding on the fiber bundles at a same time; in every combination of two fiber bundles that are adjacent to one another among the at least three fiber bundles, the two fiber bundles differ in thickness from one another; and a number of classes of thickness dimension included in the at least three fiber bundles that are wound on in the pre-form fabrication step is two.
6. The high-pressure tank fabrication method according to claim 2, wherein: the pre-form fabrication step includes arraying at least three of the fiber bundles in a width direction and winding on the fiber bundles at a same time; in every combination of two fiber bundles that are adjacent to one another among the at least three fiber bundles, the two fiber bundles differ in thickness from one another; and a number of classes of thickness dimension included in the at least three fiber bundles that are wound on in the pre-form fabrication step is two.
7. The high-pressure tank fabrication method according to claim 1, wherein a plurality of the fiber bundles that are wound on at a same time in the pre-form fabrication step are equal to one another in fiber weight per unit length.
8. The high-pressure tank fabrication method according to claim 2, wherein a plurality of the fiber bundles that are wound on at a same time in the pre-form fabrication step are equal to one another in fiber weight per unit length.
9. The high-pressure tank fabrication method according to claim 3, wherein a plurality of the fiber bundles that are wound on at the same time in the pre-form fabrication step are equal to one another in fiber weight per unit length.
10. The high-pressure tank fabrication method according to claim 5, wherein a plurality of the fiber bundles that are wound on at the same time in the pre-form fabrication step are equal to one another in fiber weight per unit length.
11. The high-pressure tank fabrication method according to claim 1, wherein the molding step includes compression molding that includes, after injecting the resin, completely closing the mold.
12. The high-pressure tank fabrication method according to claim 2, wherein the molding step includes compression molding that includes, after injecting the resin, completely closing the mold.
13. The high-pressure tank fabrication method according to claim 3, wherein the molding step includes compression molding that includes, after injecting the resin, completely closing the mold.
14. The high-pressure tank fabrication method according to claim 5, wherein the molding step includes compression molding that includes, after injecting the resin, completely closing the mold.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF DRAWINGS
(1)
(2)
(3)
(4)
(5)
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(6) First, a filament-winding device 10 according to an exemplary embodiment is described using
(7)
(8) As shown in
(9) In order from an upstream side, the unwinding section 20 includes a plural number (four in the present exemplary embodiment) of bobbins 21, plural unwinding rollers 22 provided in correspondence with the bobbins 21, a bundling roller 23, an active dancer 24, and a plural number (three in the present exemplary embodiment) of conveyance rollers 25, 26 and 27.
(10) The fiber bundles 40 are wound onto the bobbins 21. The fiber bundles 40 are dry carbon fiber bundles that are not impregnated with resin.
(11) The plural bobbins 21 are constituted by, in order from the left side of the drawing, a first bobbin 21A, a second bobbin 21B, a third bobbin 21C and a fourth bobbin 21D. First fiber bundles 40A are wound onto the first bobbin 21A and the third bobbin 21C, and second fiber bundles 40B are wound onto the second bobbin 21B and the fourth bobbin 21D. The first fiber bundles 40A have, for example, a width of 9 mm and a thickness of 0.1 mm, and the second fiber bundles 40B have, for example, a width of 6 mm and a thickness of 0.15 mm. The first fiber bundles 40A and the second fiber bundles 40B are each constituted of approximately 36,000 carbon fibers. That is, the first fiber bundles 40A and the second fiber bundles 40B have the same fiber weight per unit length as one another but differ from one another in width and thickness.
(12) The unwinding rollers 22 convey the fiber bundles 40 unwound from the bobbins 21 to the bundling roller 23. The bundling roller 23 gathers the fiber bundles 40 unwound from the bobbins 21 and unwinds the fiber bundles 40 onto the active dancer 24. The active dancer 24 adjusts tensions in the fiber bundles 40 by moving rollers 24A (see the arrows in
(13) When the plural fiber bundles 40 unwound from the plural bobbins 21 are being wound onto the liner 80, the fiber bundles 40 are arrayed in a width direction as shown in
(14) In this state in which the plural fiber bundles 40 are arrayed in the width direction, the plural fiber bundles 40 are wound on in many windings so as to completely cover the liner 80, forming a resin layer 52 (see
(15) That is, the fabricated pre-form is provided with the liner 80 and with the resin layer 52 that is formed by the fiber bundles 40 being wound onto the liner 80. The number of layers of the fiber bundles 40 forming the resin layer 52 is not particularly limited but is, for example, around 20 to 30 layers at a trunk portion of the liner 80. The thickness of the resin layer 52 is also not particularly limited but is, for example, 20 to 30 mm. The meaning of the term trunk portion is intended to include a portion of the liner 80 with a cylindrical shape midway along an axial direction of the liner 80 (i.e., a portion that is sandwiched between dome portions).
(16)
(17) Now a molding step, which is the RTM molding step, is described using
(18) First, the pre-form 50 is placed in a mold 60 including an upper die 64 and a lower die 62. Then, as shown in
(19) Then, as shown in
Operational Effects
(20) Now, operational effects of the present exemplary embodiment are described.
(21) In the present exemplary embodiment, in the pre-form fabrication step for forming the pre-form 50, as shown in
(22) In the molding step, after the pre-form 50 is disposed in the mold and the resin is injected, compression molding (that is, injection compression molding) is conducted by completely closing the mold 60. Therefore, the resin layer 52 into which the epoxy resin has impregnated may be uniformly compressed in the thickness direction, and the gaps 56 between the fibers in the pre-form 50 may be effectively diminished in the fabricated item subsequent to the molding step.
(23) In the present exemplary embodiment, of the plural (four) fiber bundles 40 that are arrayed in the width direction and wound on at the same time, gaps are not formed between any two adjacent fiber bundles in the width direction in the resin layer 52. Therefore, a fiber volume content ratio of the fabricated item tends to be higher than in a mode in which gaps are formed in the width direction between pairs of adjacent bundles in the resin layer 52. Consequently, the high-pressure tank may be fabricated with high strength.
(24) In the present exemplary embodiment, in every combination of two fiber bundles that are adjacent to one another among the four fiber bundles that are arrayed in the width direction and wound on at the same time (a total of three combinations), the two adjacent fiber bundles differ in thickness from one another. Therefore, the gaps 56 (the resin channels) may be formed in the resin layer 52 of the pre-form 50 efficiently.
(25) In the present exemplary embodiment, the number of classes of thickness dimension included in the plural fiber bundles 40 that are wound on in the pre-form fabrication step is two (the first fiber bundles 40A and the second fiber bundles 40B). Therefore, the number of fiber bundles 40 to be prepared can be smaller than in a mode in which fiber bundles 40 with three or more classes of thickness dimension are employed, and costs are lower.
(26) In the present exemplary embodiment, the fiber weights per unit length of the plural fiber bundles 40 that are wound on in the pre-form fabrication step are equal to one another. Therefore, the gaps (the resin channels) that are formed in the fiber layers of the pre-form are more likely to be uniformly filled with fibers in the molding step. Hence, the gaps 56 between the fibers in the pre-form 50 may be even more effectively diminished in the fabricated item subsequent to the molding step.
(27) Supplementary Descriptions
(28) In the above exemplary embodiment, an example is described in which four of the fiber bundles 40 are arrayed in the width direction and wound round at the same time (see
(29) Further, in the above exemplary embodiment, an example is described in which adjacent fiber bundles (the first fiber bundle 40A and the second fiber bundle 40B) differ both in thickness and in width, but the present disclosure is not limited thus. For example, adjacent bundles with different thicknesses may have the same width.
(30) In the above exemplary embodiment, an example is described in which, although adjacent fiber bundles (the first fiber bundle 40A and the second fiber bundle 40B) differ in thickness, they have the same fiber weights per unit length. However, the present disclosure is not limited thus.
(31) In
(32) In the above exemplary embodiment, an example is described in which gaps are not formed in the width direction between the adjacent fiber bundles 40 (see
(33) In the above exemplary embodiment, an example is described in which, in every combination of two fiber bundles that are adjacent to one another among the four fiber bundles that are arrayed in the width direction and wound on at the same time (a total of three combinations), the two adjacent fiber bundles differ in thickness from one another, but the present disclosure is not limited thus. For example, of the four fiber bundles 40 that are arrayed in the width direction and wound on at the same time, one bundle may be the second fiber bundle 40B with the relatively smaller thickness and the other three bundles may be the first fiber bundles 40A with the relatively larger thickness.
(34) In the above exemplary embodiment, an example is described in which the fiber bundles are carbon fiber bundles, but the fiber bundles may be, for example, glass fiber bundles. Furthermore, in the above exemplary embodiment, an example is described in which the resin is an epoxy resin, but the type of resin is not limited thus.
(35) In the above exemplary embodiment, an example is described in which compression molding is conducted by completely closing the mold 60 after injecting the resin, but the present disclosure is not limited thus. The resin may be injected in the state in which the mold is completely closed.
(36) It is particularly difficult to impregnate resin into a fiber layer formed by hoop winding of the trunk portion of the liner 80 (i.e., winding substantially orthogonal to the central axis of the liner 80). Therefore, using fibers with different thicknesses in hoop winding of the trunk portion of the liner 80 is preferable.