In-situ fiber-optic temperature field measurement during thermoplastic composite welding and other applications
11958255 ยท 2024-04-16
Assignee
Inventors
- Victor Giurgiutiu (Columbia, SC)
- Michael Van Tooren (Elgin, SC, US)
- Bin Lin (Irmo, SC, US)
- Lingyu Yu (Columbia, SC, US)
- Mohammad Faisal Haider (West Columbia, SC, US)
Cpc classification
B29C66/1122
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C66/7212
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C66/43
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29K2081/04
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C66/91211
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C66/71
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C66/71
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29K2081/04
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C66/81455
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C65/3636
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C66/7212
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C65/8253
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
G01K11/32
PHYSICS
B29C66/72141
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C66/91216
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C66/91951
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C66/73921
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C66/349
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
B29C65/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
An in-situ fiber-optic temperature field measurement is disclosed that can allow process monitoring and diagnosis for thermoplastic composite welding and other applications. A distributed fiber-optic sensor can be permanently embedded in a thermoplastic welded structure when it is welded and left there to perform lifelong monitoring and inspection. The fiber optic sensor can include a dissolvable coating, or a coating matched to the composite material to be welded. Other applications include in-situ fiber-optic temperature field measurement on thermoset composite curing (autoclave), for thermoplastic and thermoset composites during compression molding, and for fiber-optic field measurements on freeze/thaw of large items of public health interest, such as stored or transported foodstuffs.
Claims
1. A sensor comprising, a fiber optic sensor comprising an optical fiber having an elongated body portion with a coating and fiber core for being a distributed sensor received in association with a specimen to be sensed, said fiber optic sensor further having a connection for being connected to an associated optical data acquisition system, whereby monitoring and diagnosis associated with such specimen may be conducted at plural locations of such associated specimen, and wherein the fiber optic sensor is embedded in the specimen comprising a thermoplastic composite welded structure, and said fiber optic sensor and associated optical data acquisition system monitors temperature distribution taken from plural locations in said specimen for in-situ fiber-optic direct temperature field measurement of said specimen, wherein said coating comprises an external coating of polyetheretherketone (PEEK) which can withstand heating to 610 degrees Fahrenheit; said fiber core has a diameter of up to 9 ?m; said fiber optic sensor is permanently embedded in the thermoplastic composite welded structure; and said thermoplastic composite welded structure comprises two plates welded at a lap joint thereof, with said elongated distributed sensor wrapped around each respective plate and through a welding region between such two plates for simultaneous measurement of the temperature field inside the welding region and in the two plates for monitoring and inspection of the thermoplastic composite welded structure over its lifetime.
2. A sensor as in claim 1, wherein the specimen comprises a carbon fiber reinforced polymer (CFRP) composite with a composite matrix that is a thermoplastic polymer, and the specimen is to be treated by induction welding.
3. A sensor as in claim 1, wherein said fiber optic sensor includes a dissolvable coating.
4. A sensor as in claim 1, wherein said fiber optic sensor includes thermoplastic composite coatings to be embedded in the thermoplastic composite welded structure specimen during welding thereof.
5. A sensor as in claim 1, wherein said fiber optic sensor includes cladding and coating with the same polymer as in the associated specimen.
6. A sensor as in claim 1, further including an associated heatsink and active air cooling.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE FIGURES
(1) A full and enabling disclosure of the presently disclosed subject matter, including the best mode thereof, to one of ordinary skill in the art, is set forth more particularly including the specification, and including reference to the accompanying figures in which:
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(37) Repeat use of reference characters in the present specification and drawings is intended to represent the same or analogous features or elements or steps of the presently disclosed subject matter.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PRESENTLY DISCLOSED SUBJECT MATTER
(38) Reference will now be made in detail to various embodiments of the presently disclosed subject matter, one or more examples of which are set forth below. Each embodiment is provided by way of explanation of the subject matter, not limitation thereof. In fact, it will be apparent to those skilled in the art that various modifications and variations may be made in the presently disclosed subject matter without departing from the scope or spirit of the subject matter. For instance, features illustrated or described as part of one embodiment, may be used in another embodiment to yield a still further embodiment, and corresponding and/or associated methodologies may be practiced relative to apparatus disclosed and/or suggested herewith, all of which comprise various embodiments of the presently disclosed subject matter.
(39) An in-situ fiber-optic temperature field measurement that can perform process monitoring and diagnosis for thermoplastic composite welding and other applications is disclosed in the presently-disclosed subject matter. One aspect of such presently disclosed subject matter in some embodiments thereof is a distributed fiber-optic sensor that can be permanently embedded in the thermoplastic welded structure when it is welded and left there to perform lifelong monitoring and inspection. Other applications include in-situ fiber-optic temperature field measurement on thermoset composite curing (autoclave), for thermoplastic and thermoset composites during compression molding, and for fiber-optic field measurements on freeze/thaw of large items of public health interest, such as stored or transported foodstuffs.
(40) One major potential industrial application of the presently disclosed subject matter is in aerospace engineering. Using the in-situ distributed fiber optic sensor, a solution for monitoring thermoplastic welding is available which may be advantageously adopted by many industrial users. Utilizing various properties of the presently disclosed distributed fiber optic sensor, a variety of methods can be integrated into such a sensing system or arrangement as disclosed herewith to detect such as temperature and/or strain, from an initial manufacturing process to the entire operational life of the structure.
(41) An in-situ approach that can perform on-demand process monitoring and diagnosis for thermoplastic welding and other application is therefore advantageously provided in the presently disclosed subject matter. The monitoring and diagnosis approach described herein in certain instances is based on the following objectives: ability to assess the thermoplastic welding process and other applications; ability to detect, locate, and assess the defects during the welding process and other application; and ability to perform in-situ embedded health monitoring and diagnosis after the welding.
(42) One aspect of certain embodiments of the presently disclosed subject matter is a distributed fiber optic sensor that can be permanently embedded in a thermoplastic welded structure when it is welded, and then left there to perform lifelong monitoring and inspection. Other potential applications include but are not limited to in-situ temperature filed monitoring on thermoset curing, compression molding, and similar.
(43) When a sensor is embedded during thermoplastic welding in accordance with the presently disclosed subject matter, the sensor that is being embedded should be able to: (1) sustain the welding temperature; (2) sustain the pressure; (3) sustain the residue contraction caused by the curing process; and (4) function without degradation after the curing. The distributed fiber optic sensor is made of high temperature coating with small diameter fiber.
(44) In some instances for presently disclosed subject matter, it has been preferred to provide sensors with dissolvable coatings for in-situ induction welding monitoring of thermoplastic composites.
(45) In general, regarding presently disclosed subject matter, thermoplastic composites offer several mechanical advantages over thermoset composites, for example, especially regarding damage tolerance. Thermoplastics also offer manufacturing advantages such as the possibility of fusion bonding. For some embodiments of presently disclosed subject matter, induction welding is preferred. As with all welding processes, quality control heavily relies on process control since non-destructive inspection of strength is not possible.
(46) Proper induction welding relies on assuring temperature and pressure to be in a certain window for a certain time. Verifying the process requires, therefore, measurement of the temperature at the weld surface during process qualification, which has previously been very expensive. The presently disclosed subject matter provides the development of a temperature sensor that can be left in the part after manufacture.
(47) One existing prior art approach has involved the use of Carbon Fiber/PPS material in currently flying certified primary, induction welded, structures. Such current approach to welding is qualified by making multiple ship sets equipped with thermocouples, adjusting the process until proper process window is found, scraping test articles, and then welding a series of products keeping process parameters constant.
(48) The presently disclosed in-situ process monitoring and welding uses temperature monitoring techniques with modified sensors for real time, in-situ monitoring of temperatures during welding Optical fiber-High Definition Fiber Optic Sensing (HD-FOS) operations.
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(50) In-situ process monitoring and welding involves per presently disclosed subject matter allowing a sensor to stay in the product after welding. There needs to be no influence on mechanical strength of the welded material, and no source of fatigue damage initiation.
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(52) As can be seen, the cladding and coating are very large in diameter compared to the carbon fibers in the structural material. Such dimensional relationships result in a source of stress concentrations and fatigue initiation, which is undesirable for an in-situ device and process, as presently disclosed.
(53) Per presently disclosed subject matter, such issues are addressed by replacing the cladding and coating with the same thermoplastic polymer as being used in the material being welded. Such approach of the presently disclosed subject matter then results in the coating and cladding melting during welding and mixing with the base material. In one exemplary embodiment, PPS material was used for the coating and cladding features, which is same material as used in the base material, for example, in the Gulfstream G650 Rudder and elevator.
(54) Generally speaking, existing optical fibers consist of a core (the actual optical fiber), a cladding (consisting of a polymer with a refraction index that will ensure the light to stay within the core), and a coating (a polymer layer to protect the core and cladding during handling). The core+cladding and coating have a diameter of around 250 micrometers. This is very large compared to a carbon or glass fiber diameter of about 10 micrometers. The presently disclosed subject matter replaces the cladding and coating with a polymer that is equal to the polymer in the composite that one is trying to weld. The cladding and coating will then meld during the welding and will not cause any stress concentration in the material after welding because of its diameter.
(55) The newly developed sensors allow in-situ measuring of temperatures in thermoplastic polymer based composite workpieces during welding, including the temperatures at the weld line. The new sensors can be left in product after welding without negatively influencing the static and/or fatigue strength of the workpieces.
(56) Composites are heterogeneous materials with anisotropic properties that can be tailored for a desired application. They have historically provided outstanding mechanical properties in a lightweight design, led to many technological revolutions, and have recently attracted renewed interest because of its incorporation in the primary structures of major commercial aircraft. Among various composite materials, thermoplastic composites offer several advantages over thermoset composites. Thermoplastic polymer-based composites show a higher toughness, which means they are harder to damage, and if damaged, they will show a higher resistance against the growth of that damage. This feature is important to structure with a high Compression strength After Impact (CAI), one of the current drivers behind composite materials systems.
(57) Thermoplastics also offer the possibility of fusion bonding. This means that parts can be joined by re-melting the parts of the components that need to be joined and solidify these parts under pressure. This allows elimination of fasteners and offers lower weight, reduced part counts and lower fly away cost. The heating required for fusion bonding can originate in contact heat, vibration-based heating etc.
(58) There are many different bonding types in composite structures. Lap joint is one of them. Single lap joint can be made by welding, adhesive bonding or mechanical fastening. Adhesively bonded or welded composite single lap joints possess advantages such as weight reduction over traditional mechanical joining methods and reduce stress concentration. Welding is appropriate for thermoplastic composites, whereas adhesive bonding is mostly used for thermoset composites.
(59) One major challenge during welding of a joint is to keep the temperature above the melting point of the thermoplastic. Low temperature or excessive temperature may deteriorate the mechanical properties of the lap joint. To mitigate the problem, the presently disclosed temperature monitoring methodology uses fiber optic sensor or sensors inserted between two surfaces of a lap joint, to monitor the temperature during the welding process. The presently disclosed subject matter relates in pertinent part to: (1) manufacturing of thermoplastic composite plates, (2) monitoring temperature during welding processes using a distributed fiber optic system, and (3) assessment of mechanical properties based on inclusion of a fiber optic sensor or sensors in the lap joint.
(60) While use of a fiber optic sensor has shown promising results for monitoring the temperature during the welding process, during welding of a lap joint, the fiber optic sensor coating may in some instances melt and adhere to the composite plates inside the lap joint area. In addition, inclusion of fiber optic sensor may in some instances affect the mechanical strength of the lap joint.
(61) With respect to the task of manufacturing thermoplastic composite plates, one embodiment makes use of Polyphenylene Sulfide (PPS) fabric prepreg from TenCate Cetex to prepare TPC plates for welded specimens. The PPS prepreg was pre-consolidated reinforced laminate with continuous woven carbon fibers, with a melt temperature is 536? F.
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(63) The presently disclosed subject matter provides a technique to monitor the temperature of thermoplastic composite materials welding in real time using distributed fiber optical sensor. Distributed optical fibers can be used to monitor strain and temperature with high space resolution (for example, 5 mm per sensing point) and at a high sampling rate (100 Hz). As further described herein, disclosed exemplary embodiments herewith make use of the distributed fiber optic system ODiSI B from LUNA Inc.
(64) Per the presently disclosed subject matter, a single distributed fiber optic sensor is able to be used to monitor the referenced welding process. In one exemplary embodiment, the 2-meter fiber optic sensor is wrapped around bottom, middle, and top of the plates to be welded, such as represented in present
(65) As seen, a single optical fiber is included in a welding lap joint specimen. The fiber is routed on top of a first workpiece, through the weld line between the two workpieces, and at the bottom of the second workpiece. The two work pieces were heated using induction heating and the temperature was recorded as a function of time. The sensor technology applied in the test uses a non-Bragg grated fiber. The internal defects of the fiber are used as the sensors yielding in this instance about 1 sensor each 2 mm of length. The standard fibers are stripped from their coating and a coating of a polymer similar to the polymer in the workpieces is applied to the fiber instead. Such coating will melt during the welding process and is blending with the polymer in the workpieces. This causes the stress concentration related to the presence of the sensor in the workpieces to be reduced considerably.
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(72) Temperature distribution of the middle plane is the most important one for proper induction welding. Therefore, the heating profile and cooling profile of the mid plane during welding is also determined, as shown by
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(74) Insofar as assessment of mechanical properties, the mechanical strength of welded lap joints with and without sensors was measured. Since the fiber optic sensor is an external inclusion, it may create stress concentration in the composite lap joint. The 12?6 sample was cut in to 6?6 samples, and then the samples were placed side by side with 1-inch overlap, as illustrated in
(75) Three categories of samples were manufactured, including: (a) Pristine lap joint (without inclusion of fiber), (b) Inclusion of thin fiber, and (c) Inclusion of thick fiber.
(76) The entire samples were placed in the hot press for bonded lap joint.
(77) In such samples, both of the samples with fibers are PEEK (polyetheretherketone; a thermoplastic material) coated. The thick optical fiber is SM polyimide radiation resistant fiber with core/cladding/polyimide coating/PEEK coating diameter at 9 ?m/125 ?m/155 ?m/400 ?m. The thin optical fiber is SM1500 with core/cladding/polyimide coating/PEEK coating diameter at 5.3 ?m/80 ?m/102 ?m/228 ?m.
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(81) Test results showed that the strength of the lap joints of pristine, thin fiber and thin fiber lap joint are 48.7%, 48.32% and 47.1% of that of the pristine plate. More particularly,
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(83) The following further describes various observed data from presently disclosed embedding of PPS coated optical fibers in composite plates. For example,
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(86) In the context of using a hot press for creating a bonded lap joint, with embedded PPS coated optical fibers in composite plates, two potential procedures form part of presently disclosed subject matter. They include using hot press for bonded lap joint with inclusion of PPS optical fiber and using induction welding for bonded lap joint with inclusion of PPS optical fiber.
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(88) As otherwise discussed herein, presently disclosed subject matter includes assessment of resulting mechanical properties, for use of particular embodiments for particular applications. For example,
(89) For the optical imaging of hot press bonded sample of present
(90) As otherwise referenced herein, presently disclosed subject matter may relate to using induction welding for bonded lap joint.
(91) In the embodiment of
(92) As otherwise discussed herein, presently disclosed subject matter includes assessment of resulting mechanical properties, for use of particular embodiments for particular applications. For example,
(93) The presently disclosed subject matter shows that, for distributed optical fiber sensor for monitoring the temperature during welding process, optical fiber can be effective as a temperature sensor. Further, consideration of resulting mechanical properties (assessed on the basis of embedded optical fiber in lap joints) based on comparisons of three plates (pristine, thin fiber, and thick fiber), show that inclusion of optical fiber did not change the mechanical strength significantly. Further, the PPS coating was observed to be melted away during induction welding process. Thus, presently disclosed subject matter provides for quality control of induction welding of thermoplastic composites using temperature sensing with dissolvable coating equipped optical fibers.
(94) Considered another way, presently disclosed subject matter has shown the ability to perform real time temperature monitoring of induction welding for thermoplastic composite lap joints using distributed fiber optic sensors. Mechanical testing on the lap joints with embedded fibers, show that the inclusion of fiber optic sensor does not reduce the samples' mechanical strength.
(95) The presently disclosed subject matter can be used in a variety of potential industrial applications, including but not limited to monitoring temperature distribution during: thermoplastic composite welding; thermoset composite curing; composite compression molding; and freeze/thaw of large items involving public health interests.
(96) It may also be used in yet other applications, for example, to examine residue strain after welding, to monitor temperature distribution during operation, or to monitor strain change during operation.
(97) When used in the fabrication of welded thermoplastic composites through induction heating, the presently disclosed subject matter will increase efficiency and accuracy and reduce rejects because it can measure the temperature field distribution inside the material in the welded area. Such will advantageously lead to increase of productivity and minimize the risk of rejects. It will also simplify the thermoplastic induction welding process by overcoming the possibility of creating defects.
(98) When used in the fabrication of autoclave or heated vacuum-bag or hot-press cured thermoset composites, the presently disclosed subject matter will increase efficiency and accuracy and reduce rejects because it can measure the temperature field distribution inside the material during the cure process and can develop temperature maps that can be used to adjust the heating pattern. Such will advantageously lead to increase of productivity and minimize the risk of rejects. It will also simplify the thermoset cure process by overcoming the possibility of creating defects.
(99) When used in the case of refrigerated food items carried in bulk or other health-safety critical situation that required a uniformly maintained low or cryogenic temperature, the presently disclosed subject matter will promote safety by providing a continuous reading of low temperature distribution in the safety-critical item over a period of time.
(100) A variety of entities may advantageously make use of the presently disclosed subject matter (both as to methodology and apparatus as presently disclosed) including, but not limited to, governmental and industrial laboratories, original equipment manufactures, and operators of large critical infrastructure projects (such as bridges and buildings), aerospace, energy generation, nuclear, oil, and automotive, and any related industries that are required or need to assure the safety of their products by structural health monitoring and nondestructive evaluations.