COMPOSITE STRUCTURAL PANEL AND METHOD OF FABRICATION
20170298581 · 2017-10-19
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
B29C70/086
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B32B5/26
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B32B3/26
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C44/1261
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
E04C2002/3472
FIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
B29C70/48
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B32B5/18
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B32B7/12
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B32B5/245
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B32B3/28
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C44/1285
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B32B7/05
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B32B2262/106
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B32B2260/021
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
E01D19/12
FIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
B32B5/24
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C44/12
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C70/48
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B32B7/12
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B32B5/26
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B32B3/28
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C70/08
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
A structural panel and method of fabricating and manufacturing same comprises a top panel and a bottom panel separated by and attached to at least one, but preferably a plurality, of structural composite preforms which may be fabricated by a continuous manufacturing process and may be saturated by resin using a continuous wetting process. The composite preforms may take any cross sectional shape but are preferably trapezoidal. The top and bottom panels may be fabricated from a plurality of layers of woven fabric layers and non-woven fabric layers which are saturated with a resin that is subsequently cured using cure processes known in the art. The composite structural panel of the invention is usable as a flat structural member for use as bridge decking, ramps, trestles, and any application requiring a structural panel.
Claims
1. A structural composite panel, comprising: a top plate defined as a planer structure and having an upper surface and an underneath surface, wherein said top plate is comprised of a plurality of fiber layers saturated with resin and subsequently cured; a bottom plate defined as a planer structure and having an upper surface and a lower surface wherein said bottom plate is comprised of a plurality of fiber layers saturated with resin and subsequently cured; a first set of at least one composite preforms having a foam core and covered in a fabric saturated with resin and subsequently cured; a second set of at least one composite preforms having a foam core and covered in a fabric saturated with resin and subsequently cured; wherein said first set of composite preforms are attached to said underneath surface of said top plate; and wherein said second set of composite preforms are attached to said upper surface of said bottom plate; and wherein said first set of composite preforms and said second set of composite preforms are attached together forming a structural composite panel.
2. The structural composite panel of claim 1, wherein said first and said second set of composite preforms are trapezoidal in cross section, and wherein said attachment of said first set of composite preforms to said underneath surface of said top plate occurs at a large base of said trapezoids; and wherein said attachment of said second set of composite preforms to said upper surface of said bottom plate occurs at a large base of said trapezoids; and wherein said attachment of said first set of composite preforms and said second set of composite preforms occurs at a small base of said trapezoids.
3. The structural composite panel of claim 1, wherein said at least one composite preform is further defined as a plurality of composite preforms.
4. The structural composite panel of claim 2, wherein said at least one composite preform is further defined as a plurality of composite preforms.
5. The structural composite panel of claim 3, wherein said plurality of composite preforms comprising the first set of composite preforms is the same number as said plurality of composite preforms comprising the second set of composite preforms.
6. The structural composite panel of claim 1, wherein said plurality of fabric layers comprising said top plate and said bottom plate are further defined as being characterized by having a first group of fabric layers, second group of fabric layers, and third group of fabric layers wherein said first group of fabric layers comprises a plurality of woven fiber layers separated by non-woven fabric layers and having longitudinal fibers aligned in a first direction; wherein said second group of fabric layers comprises a plurality of woven fiber layers separated by non-woven fabric layers and having longitudinal fibers aligned in a second direction that is transverse to said first direction; wherein third group of fabric layers comprises a plurality of woven fiber layers separated by non-woven fabric layers and having longitudinal fibers aligned in said first direction.
7. The structural composite panel of claim 2, wherein said plurality of fabric layers comprising said top plate and said bottom plate are further defined as being characterized by having a first group of fabric layers, second group of fabric layers, and third group of fabric layers wherein said first group of fabric layers comprises a plurality of woven fiber layers separated by non-woven fabric layers and having longitudinal fibers aligned in a first direction; wherein said second group of fabric layers comprises a plurality of woven fiber layers separated by non-woven fabric layers and having longitudinal fibers aligned in a second direction that is transvers to said first direction; wherein third group of fabric layers comprises a plurality of woven fiber layers separated by non-woven fabric layers and having longitudinal fibers aligned in said first direction.
8. The structural composite panel of claim 3, wherein said plurality of fabric layers comprising said top plate and said bottom plate are further defined as being characterized by having a first group of fabric layers, second group of fabric layers, and third group of fabric layers wherein said first group of fabric layers comprises a plurality of woven fiber layers separated by non-woven fabric layers and having longitudinal fibers aligned in a first direction; wherein said second group of fabric layers comprises a plurality of woven fiber layers separated by non-woven fabric layers and having longitudinal fibers aligned in a second direction that is transvers to said first direction; wherein third group of fabric layers comprises a plurality of woven fiber layers separated by non-woven fabric layers and having longitudinal fibers aligned in said first direction.
9. The structural composite panel of claim 4, wherein said plurality of fabric layers comprising said top plate and said bottom plate are further defined as being characterized by having a first group of fabric layers, second group of fabric layers, and third group of fabric layers wherein said first group of fabric layers comprises a plurality of woven fiber layers separated by non-woven fabric layers and having longitudinal fibers aligned in a first direction; wherein said second group of fabric layers comprises a plurality of woven fiber layers separated by non-woven fabric layers and having longitudinal fibers aligned in a second direction that is transvers to said first direction; wherein third group of fabric layers comprises a plurality of woven fiber layers separated by non-woven fabric layers and having longitudinal fibers aligned in said first direction.
10. The structural composite panel of claim 5, wherein said plurality of fabric layers comprising said top plate and said bottom plate are further defined as being characterized by having a first group of fabric layers, second group of fabric layers, and third group of fabric layers wherein said first group of fabric layers comprises a plurality of woven fiber layers separated by non-woven fabric layers and having longitudinal fibers aligned in a first direction; wherein said second group of fabric layers comprises a plurality of woven fiber layers separated by non-woven fabric layers and having longitudinal fibers aligned in a second direction that is transvers to said first direction; wherein third group of fabric layers comprises a plurality of woven fiber layers separated by non-woven fabric layers and having longitudinal fibers aligned in said first direction.
11. The structural composite panel of claim 1, wherein said bottom plate is further defined as having a rectangular or square shape having four sides, wherein two opposing sides further comprise a side plate, and wherein said side plate is of a height that is substantially equal to the thickness of the combination of said top plate, said composite preforms attached to said top plate, said bottom plate, and said composite preforms attached to said bottom plate.
12. The structural composite panel of claim 2, wherein said bottom plate is further defined as having a rectangular or square shape having four sides, wherein two opposing sides further comprise a side plate, and wherein said side plate is of a height that is substantially equal to the thickness of the combination of said top plate, said composite preforms attached to said top plate, said bottom plate, and said composite preforms attached to said bottom plate.
13. The structural composite panel of claim 1, wherein said preforms comprising said top plate and said preforms comprising said bottom plate form complimentary surfaces such that a top plate may nest within a bottom plate when a top plate is inverted and motivated onto a bottom plate.
14. The structural composite panel of claim 2, wherein said preforms comprising said top plate and said preforms comprising said bottom plate form complimentary surfaces such that a top plate may nest within a bottom plate when a top plate is inverted and motivated onto a bottom plate.
15. The structural composite panel of claim 6, wherein said top and bottom plate woven fabric layers is further defined as 18 ounces per square yard warp unidirectional glass fabric and wherein said non-woven layers comprise nine ounce per square yard non-woven fabric.
16. The structural composite panel of claim 7, wherein said top and bottom plate woven fabric layers is further defined as 18 ounces per square yard warp unidirectional glass fabric and wherein said non-woven layers comprise nine ounce per square yard non-woven fabric.
17. The structural composite panel of claim 8, wherein said top and bottom plate woven fabric layers is further defined as 18 ounces per square yard warp unidirectional glass fabric and wherein said non-woven layers comprise nine ounce per square yard non-woven fabric.
18. The structural composite panel of claim 9, wherein said top and bottom plate woven fabric layers is further defined as 18 ounces per square yard warp unidirectional glass fabric and wherein said non-woven layers comprise nine ounce per square yard non-woven fabric.
19. A structural composite panel, comprising: a top plate defined as a planer structure and having an upper surface and an underneath surface, wherein said top plate is comprised of a plurality of fiber layers saturated with resin and subsequently cured; a bottom plate defined as a planer structure and having an upper surface and a lower surface wherein said bottom plate is comprised of a plurality of fiber layers saturated with resin and subsequently cured; a set of at least one composite preforms having a foam core and covered in a fabric saturated with resin and subsequently cured; wherein said set of composite preforms are attached to said underneath surface of said top plate; and wherein said set of composite preforms are attached to said upper surface of said bottom plate.
20. The structural composite panel of claim 19, wherein said first and said second set of composite preforms are trapezoidal in cross section, and wherein said attachment of said set of composite preforms to said underneath surface of said top plate occurs at a small base of said trapezoids; and wherein said set of composite preforms attachment to said upper surface of said bottom plate occurs at a large base of said trapezoids.
21. The structural composite panel of claim 19, wherein said at least one composite preform is further defined as a plurality of composite preforms.
22. The structural composite panel of claim 20, wherein said at least one composite preform is further defined as a plurality of composite preforms.
23. The structural composite panel of claim 1, wherein said plurality of fabric layers comprising said top plate and said bottom plate are further defined as being characterized by having a first group of fabric layers, second group of fabric layers, and third group of fabric layers wherein said first group of fabric layers comprises a plurality of woven fiber layers separated by non-woven fabric layers and having longitudinal fibers aligned in a first direction; wherein said second group of fabric layers comprises a plurality of woven fiber layers separated by non-woven fabric layers and having longitudinal fibers aligned in a second direction that is transverse to said first direction; wherein third group of fabric layers comprises a plurality of woven fiber layers separated by non-woven fabric layers and having longitudinal fibers aligned in said first direction.
24. The structural composite panel of claim 2, wherein said plurality of fabric layers comprising said top plate and said bottom plate are further defined as being characterized by having a first group of fabric layers, second group of fabric layers, and third group of fabric layers wherein said first group of fabric layers comprises a plurality of woven fiber layers separated by non-woven fabric layers and having longitudinal fibers aligned in a first direction; wherein said second group of fabric layers comprises a plurality of woven fiber layers separated by non-woven fabric layers and having longitudinal fibers aligned in a second direction that is transvers to said first direction; wherein third group of fabric layers comprises a plurality of woven fiber layers separated by non-woven fabric layers and having longitudinal fibers aligned in said first direction.
25. A method for manufacturing a structural composite panel, comprising the steps of: providing a top plate comprising a plurality of fabric layers saturated with resin and subsequently cured; providing a bottom plate comprising a plurality of fabric layers saturated with resin and subsequently cured; fabricating a plurality of composite preforms; attaching a first set of a plurality of composite preforms to an underneath surface of said top plate; attaching a second set of a plurality of composite preforms to an upper surface of said bottom plate; and individually attaching the composite preforms of the first set to the composite preforms of the second set.
26. The method for manufacturing a structural composite panel of claim 25, wherein said composite preforms are fabricated using a continuous manufacturing process.
27. The method for manufacturing a structural composite panel of claim 25, wherein said composite preforms are trapezoidal in cross section.
28. The method for manufacturing a structural composite panel of claim 25, wherein said first set of composite preforms and said second set of composite preforms are the same in number.
29. The method for manufacturing a structural composite panel of claim 25, wherein said attachment of said composite preforms to said top plate and to said bottom plate is by chemical bonding.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0021] The accompanying drawings, which are incorporated into and form a part of the specification, illustrate one or more embodiments of the present invention and, together with the description, serve to explain the principles of the invention. The drawings are only for the purpose of illustrating the preferred embodiments of the invention and are not to be construed as limiting the invention. In the drawings:
[0022]
[0023]
[0024]
[0025]
[0026]
[0027]
[0028]
[0029]
[0030]
[0031]
[0032]
[0033]
[0034]
[0035]
[0036]
[0037]
[0038]
[0039]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0040] The invention generally comprises a structural panel that comprises a plurality of composite preforms that are attached to a top plate and to a bottom plate to form a structural panel top half and a structural panel bottom half. The structural panel top half and structural panel bottom half may be attached together to form a completed structural panel. The invention further comprises a method of manufacturing the structural panel of the invention.
[0041] As used herein, the word “panel” or “structural panel” means a completed structural panel that may be utilized in any orientation, and for any application, as may be desired by the user. Thus, a completed structural panel of the invention may be used to provide decking for bridges, ramps, trestles, floors for buildings, or other horizontal, vertical or angled structures. In the exemplary application disclosed herein, one intended use of the structural panel of the invention is that of decking for bridges. However it is to be understood the bridge decking application is only one of many applications of the structural panel of the invention, and that the structural panels of the invention may be utilized in any number of applications and made be disposed in any orientation as may be desired by a user to suit a particular purpose. Thus, for instance, the structural panels of the invention may be utilized to provide a vertical structure, horizontal structure, a structure that is oriented at any angle, and which may be used for any purpose.
[0042] Referring now to
[0043] Referring now to
[0044] Referring now to
[0045] Is generally desirable, but not necessary, that structural panel top half and structural panel bottom half comprise the same number of composite preforms.
[0046] Referring now to
[0047] Referring now to
[0048] Referring now to
[0049] Referring now to
[0050] Referring again to
[0051] As used herein, “foam” means foams that are commonly formed using two or more component parts which are mixed together immediately prior to the time that the phone is to be used. Thus, “foam” means any foam material used in the art of composite structure manufacture, and includes, for example and not by way of limitation, polyurethane foam such as a self-expanding self-curing foam. Typically, such a self-rising, self-curing foam is a urethane foam commercially available from BASF, MOBAY, PPG and is typically an MDI-based rigid polyurethane foam (methylene-diphenyl-methane diisocyanate) using “hydrogenated chlorofluorocarbons” (HCFe), water and/or CO2 as a blowing agent. For example the foam may be a two-part, self-expanding, self-curing urethane foam in which the component parts are mixed together prior to use. Thus, “foam” includes all foams and includes, but is not limited to, the class of foams known as structural foams.
[0052] Alternatively, after the fabric layers have been applied to the foam such that the foam core is at least partially covered by, in a preferred embodiment, a nonwoven fabric layer that is in turn covered by an outer reinforcing fabric layer, the methods taught and described in U.S. Patent Publication No. US20140262011A1 may be utilized to “wet out” or saturate the fabric layers with resin in a continuous fashion, which resin may then subsequently be cured by any of the known curing means in the art, or using the continuous cure methods taught and disclosed in U.S. Patent Publication No. US20140262011A1, creating a complete composite preform ready for assembly onto either a top plate or bottom plate of the present invention. It is within the scope of the present invention that all the methods for continuously curing the saturated composite preforms taught and disclosed in U.S. Patent Publication No. US20140262011A1 may be utilized to wet out and cure the composite preforms and plates of the invention.
[0053] As used herein, unless otherwise defined, “fabric” means woven or nonwoven fabric material. Nonwoven fabric material, sometimes also referred to as knitted fabric, is preferably a material such as, for example, commercially available under the trade name Duraspun® from Johns Manville. The nonwoven layer is generally a nonwoven fabric composed of continuous thermoplastic fiber, needle punched together to yield a felt-like fabric. In addition to fabrics like Duraspun®, other material such as polyester staple mat glass fiber mat, as well as other organic and inorganic fiber mats and fabrics can be employed as the non-woven fabric material. Reinforcing fiber is preferably, but not necessarily, a woven directional reinforcing fiber layer of organic or inorganic structural reinforcing fibers such as, for example, glass fibers, carbon fibers, aramid fibers, such as those fibers available from DuPont Corporation under the trade name Kevlar®, linear polyethylene or polypropylene fibers such as is commercially available from AlliedSignal Incorporated under the trade name Spectra®, or polyester fibers. It should be understood that the phrase “reinforcing fiber” is meant to include any fiber which, when added to a composite material, enhances the structural properties of the material. The fibers can be randomly oriented, or preferentially, they can be oriented in one or more directions. While a number of specific types of materials have been given for use as the reinforcing fiber layer, it will be appreciated by those of ordinary skill in the art that other equivalent type reinforcing fiber layers can be employed in the practice of the invention.
[0054] As used herein, unless otherwise defined, “resin” means any matrix or other material that is used to coat or saturate the fabric layers of a fiber-reinforced composite structure or preform. Such resins include but are not limited to polymers (orthophthalic, isophthalic or otherwise), polyester resins, vinyl ester resins, epoxy resins, phenolic and any other resin known in the art of composite structure manufacture. As used herein, “resin” or “resins” also includes any resin that is cured or polymerized by application of chemical accelerants or catalysts, light (regardless of wavelength), heat, electron beam cure that may utilize, for example, high energy electrons or X rays such as ionizing radiation, or any other type of cure process or materials known in the art. Light cure, as used herein, also means “light-activated”, and includes all light curable resins including but not limited to one-part translucent polymers that cure when exposed to a specific light spectrum. When the word “light” is used herein, it refers to light energy of an optical spectrum that is matched to the light curable resin it is being used to cure. “Cure on demand” resins mean any resin that does not self-cure: typically cure on demand resins are cured by application of some external energy such as heat, light, ionizing radiation or any other energy source.
[0055] As used herein, “cure” and “cured” means any method for curing resins known to persons of reasonable skill in the art such as heat cure, time cure, light cure, chemical cure and all other methods for curing resins. “Cure” and “cured” also means all methods for curing taught and disclosed in United States Patent Application Publication No. US20140262011A1, published on Sep. 18, 2014 and also includes all methods for co curing taught and disclosed in United States Patent Application Publication No. US20140199551, CO-CURED GEL COATS, ELASTOMERIC COATINGS, STRUCTURAL LAYERS, AND IN-MOLD PROCESSES FOR THEIR USE.
[0056] As referred to herein, a “unidirectional warp fabric” is a woven fabric in which the majority of fibers run in one direction, which is the direction, or warp, of the roll upon which the fabric is disposed prior to use.
Manufacturing the Composite Preforms 400
[0057] One method, although not preferred, for manufacturing the composite preforms of the invention is to use the traditional mold construction technique. Elongated molds of desirable cross section, such as trapezoidal, rectangular, triangular, square or any other cross sectional shape desired, which can be lined with fabric layers as described above, may be provided. The molds are then injected with foam which has been formed by mixing the proper ratio of constituent parts. The component foam parts typically comprise a blowing agent which is combined with a resin. After these steps, the outer reinforcing fabric layer and nonwoven fabric layer may then be saturated with resin which is subsequently allowed to cure, creating a composite preformed which may then be cut to length. The composite preform is then ready for assembly onto either a top plate or bottom plate of the invention as described elsewhere herein. In this manner, the structural preforms of the invention may be fabricated. However, this is not a preferred technique for fabrication of the structural preforms of the invention because this method the fabrication of composite preforms is time-consuming and does not lend itself to rapid production rates such as are required in an efficient assembly line.
[0058] A preferred method for continuously fabricating the composite preforms of the invention is the process described in detail in U.S. Pat. No. 5,897,818 to Lewit (the ″818 patent). Generally, a conveyor system, roller-fed fabric or fabrics, and a forming die are used to assemble the composite preform as taught and described in the '818 patent. An upper fabric guide is provided to aid in smoothing the fabric web and properly positioning same as it passes into of the forming die. Foam is injected into, or slightly before, the forming die. The foam expands into interstitial spaces in the fabric layer closest to the foam as the fabric layers are fed through the forming die, such that a composite preform exits the exit side of the forming die that is covered at least partially in one or more fabric layers, the innermost of this is attached to the expanded foam forming the foam core of the composite preform. The composite preform may then be cut to length as described in the '818 patent, or may be cut by any other means including by hand. The final, cut-to-length composite preform may then be saturated with resin, which may then be subsequently cured, by any method known in the art, including the methods of wetting out, or saturating the fabric layer or layers of the composite preform, and curing out taught and disclosed in U.S. Patent Application Publication No. US20140262011A1.
[0059] Referring now to
Manufacturing the Top Plate 101 and Bottom Plate 210 of the Invention
[0060] The top plate depicted as item 101 in the figures of the drawings, and the bottom plate, depicted as item 210 in the figures of the drawings, may each be fabricated by using manufacturing processes known in the art for fabricating laminated plates comprised of at least one, but preferably a plurality, of fabric layers that have been impregnated with resin which is subsequently cured.
[0061] Preferably, but not necessarily, the fabric layers comprising top plate 101 and bottom plate 210 may be defined as a combination of layers of fabric, in which multiple combined layers comprising a layer of woven fabric such as, for example, 18 ounce per square yard warp unidirectional E-glass stitched to a layer 1.0 ounces per square foot chopped strand mat (“CSM”) fabric. The CSM fabric provides an inter-layer spacing between the layers of warp unidirectional glass. This spacing creates a separation between the layers of warp unidirectional glass which serves to reduce shear strain forces developed in the layers of warp unidirectional glass when a plate of the invention is subjected to forces such as a bending force. This advantage of the invention over the prior art is depicted in
[0062] In contrast to the prior art panel shown in
[0063] Referring now to
[0064] Top plate 101 and bottom plate 210, depicted as rectangular in the figures of the drawings, may take any outline or shape desired and may be any cross-sectional thickness desired as may be required by the particular application for which the structural panel is intended to be used. In the exemplary embodiments described herein, top plate 101 and bottom plate 210 are shown to be rectangular in shape. However, it is to be understood that these are exemplary depictions only and that top plate 101 and bottom plate 210 may take any shape, or be any cross-sectional thickness as may be required by a specific application of the structural panel of the invention.
[0065] While woven fabric layers 270 may be any fabric, they are preferably, but not necessarily, comprised of unidirectional warp fabric layers oriented with their unidirectional fibers running as shown in
Assembling the Structural Panel Top Half 100 and Bottom Half 200
[0066] Referring now to
[0067] Still referring to
[0068] Still referring to
Assembling the Structural Panel of the Invention
[0069] Still referring to
[0070] It is to be understood that the application of curable resin(s) and other coatings, such as gel coat, may be accomplished in any order or sequence and may be subsequently cured using any process known in the art. For example, the invention comprises the methods and processes for co-curing resins, gel coats and other materials taught and described in United States Patent Application Publication No. US20140199551, CO-CURED GEL COATS, ELASTOMERIC COATINGS, STRUCTURAL LAYERS, AND IN-MOLD PROCESSES FOR THEIR USE, published Jul. 17, 2014. The co-curing methods taught in this U.S. pre-grant patent publication provide toughness, flexibility, chip and crack resistance without sacrificing good adhesion to structural layers of resin-saturated fabrics.
Fabrication and Assembly of a Non-Planer Structural Panel Embodiment
[0071] Referring now to
[0072] Referring now to
[0073] Referring now to
[0074] The composite preforms 400 of the invention need not be of uniform height or width, which is to say their cross sectional dimensions may vary along their length.
[0075] Referring now to
[0076] Although a detailed description as provided in the attachments contains many specifics for the purposes of illustration, anyone of ordinary skill in the art will appreciate that many variations and alterations to the following details are within the scope of the invention. Accordingly, the following preferred embodiments of the invention are set forth without any loss of generality to, and without imposing limitations upon, the claimed invention. Thus the scope of the invention should be determined by the appended claims and their legal equivalents, and not merely by the preferred examples or embodiments given.
INDUSTRIAL APPLICABILITY
[0077] A composite structural panel and method of fabricating and manufacturing same comprises a top panel and a bottom panel separated by and attached to at least one, but preferably a plurality, of structural composite preforms which may be fabricated by a continuous manufacturing process and may be saturated by resin using a continuous wetting process. The composite preforms may take any cross sectional shape but are preferably trapezoidal. The top and bottom panels may be fabricated from a plurality of layers of woven fabric layers and non-woven fabric layers which are saturated with a resin that is subsequently cured using cure processes known in the art.
[0078] The composite structural panel of the invention is usable as a flat structural member for use as bridge decking, ramps, trestles, roof structures, floor structures, wall structures, and any application requiring a structural panel, or, in alternative embodiments, may be fabricated and assembled in any desired shape, such as a curved shape, as may be required for a particular structural application. Thus, curved embodiments of the structural panel of the invention may be used to form crowned roadways which shed water as may be required for vehicles to safely traverse a bridge or other roadway structure, or may be used to form roof panels, coverings for walkways, and the like.
[0079] Cabling, piping, conduit, and the like may traverse the structure through open spaces in the panels of the invention as desired by the user. Furthermore, the open spaces of the invention may be used for optical and other inspection after manufacturing or after installation of the structural panels of the invention. This ability to inspect the interior of the installed structural panel of the invention is a significant advancement in the state of the art, as it is generally impossible to inspect the interior of the typical structural panels of the prior art, which may be fabricated, for example, from cement.
[0080] The complimentary surfaces of the structural panel halves allow for nesting of panel halves during shipment, thus reducing shipping volume and therefore also reducing shipping costs. In this embodiment, structural panel halves may efficiently be shipped to a construction site, such bridge, building, or other construction site, and assembled in place using, for example, chemical bonding.
[0081] The composite preforms comprising the invention may be manufactured by continuous manufacturing processes, enabling rapid manufacturing, reducing lead time for production of panels, and allows for common cross sections of preforms to be pre-fabricated for use in manufacturing structural composite panels of the invention.
[0082] The structural composite panels of the invention enable the fabrication of structures are not susceptible to corrosion, rust or other degradation suffered by metals structures, and further are not susceptible to the degrading effects of galvanic corrosion. The preferred embodiments of the structural composite panels of the invention contain no metallic components.