Compression Moulding of SMC, Visualisation and Inverse Modelling

Before presenting the Sheet Moulding Compound (SMC) process, which is the primarily focus of this work, a literature survey is carried out to deal with fibre reinforced polymer composites in general. Then the first part of this work is presented and is primarily focused on experimental visualisation...

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Main Author: Odenberger, Torbjörn
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: Luleå 2005
Subjects:
Online Access:http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:ltu:diva-16860
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spelling ndltd-UPSALLA1-oai-DiVA.org-ltu-168602017-10-20T05:30:52ZCompression Moulding of SMC, Visualisation and Inverse ModellingengOdenberger, TorbjörnLuleå2005Fluid Mechanics and AcousticsStrömningsmekanik och akustikBefore presenting the Sheet Moulding Compound (SMC) process, which is the primarily focus of this work, a literature survey is carried out to deal with fibre reinforced polymer composites in general. Then the first part of this work is presented and is primarily focused on experimental visualisation of the flow during mould closure of SMC. Circular plates are manufactured with industry scale equipment at close to production conditions. Special attention is given to the advancing flow front, for which the full complexity is captured by means of continuous high resolution close-up monitoring. From the experimental visualisation of the flow front, three phases are defined, namely squish, flow, and boiling. During the initial phase, squish, outer layers do not remain outer layers, the actual flow is very complex and air is likely to be entrapped. The governing process parameters during this phase are mould temperature, mould closing speed and amount of preheating in the mould. During the second phase, flow, the flow is stable and seemingly viscous. During the last phase, boiling, bubbles are observed in the low pressure region at the flow front, favouring the void content both internally and on the surface. Based on a chemical analysis including mass spectrometry and thermogravimetry, the gas is probably styrene. In the second part it is investigated if an inverse modelling approach by proportional regularisation can be applied to mimic the pressure distribution during compression moulding of SMC. The process is simulated with Computational Fluid Dynamics and the mastered parameter, the viscosity of the SMC, is allowed to vary as a function of time. A grid refinement study of two ways to model the process and for three fictitious pressure scenarios yields that the suggested approach work very well and that the numerical errors can be minimised as desired. Finally a validation process is carried out showing that to get quantitative agreements of the whole pressure field more advanced viscosity models must be used. In order to verify the inverse modelling system have to important errors are studied. Firstly the error between calculated and experimental pressure, secondly the discretisation error due to solving the problem for many small volumes. Both have to be minimized and the later is studied with Richardson's extrapolation. The conclusions are that the initial guess is very important for predictions in the beginning of the simulation. Godkänd; 2005; 20070108 (haneit)Licentiate thesis, comprehensive summaryinfo:eu-repo/semantics/masterThesistexthttp://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:ltu:diva-16860Local 04fca050-9ef6-11db-8975-000ea68e967bLicentiate thesis / Luleå University of Technology, 1402-1757 ; 2005:34application/pdfinfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Fluid Mechanics and Acoustics
Strömningsmekanik och akustik
spellingShingle Fluid Mechanics and Acoustics
Strömningsmekanik och akustik
Odenberger, Torbjörn
Compression Moulding of SMC, Visualisation and Inverse Modelling
description Before presenting the Sheet Moulding Compound (SMC) process, which is the primarily focus of this work, a literature survey is carried out to deal with fibre reinforced polymer composites in general. Then the first part of this work is presented and is primarily focused on experimental visualisation of the flow during mould closure of SMC. Circular plates are manufactured with industry scale equipment at close to production conditions. Special attention is given to the advancing flow front, for which the full complexity is captured by means of continuous high resolution close-up monitoring. From the experimental visualisation of the flow front, three phases are defined, namely squish, flow, and boiling. During the initial phase, squish, outer layers do not remain outer layers, the actual flow is very complex and air is likely to be entrapped. The governing process parameters during this phase are mould temperature, mould closing speed and amount of preheating in the mould. During the second phase, flow, the flow is stable and seemingly viscous. During the last phase, boiling, bubbles are observed in the low pressure region at the flow front, favouring the void content both internally and on the surface. Based on a chemical analysis including mass spectrometry and thermogravimetry, the gas is probably styrene. In the second part it is investigated if an inverse modelling approach by proportional regularisation can be applied to mimic the pressure distribution during compression moulding of SMC. The process is simulated with Computational Fluid Dynamics and the mastered parameter, the viscosity of the SMC, is allowed to vary as a function of time. A grid refinement study of two ways to model the process and for three fictitious pressure scenarios yields that the suggested approach work very well and that the numerical errors can be minimised as desired. Finally a validation process is carried out showing that to get quantitative agreements of the whole pressure field more advanced viscosity models must be used. In order to verify the inverse modelling system have to important errors are studied. Firstly the error between calculated and experimental pressure, secondly the discretisation error due to solving the problem for many small volumes. Both have to be minimized and the later is studied with Richardson's extrapolation. The conclusions are that the initial guess is very important for predictions in the beginning of the simulation. === Godkänd; 2005; 20070108 (haneit)
author Odenberger, Torbjörn
author_facet Odenberger, Torbjörn
author_sort Odenberger, Torbjörn
title Compression Moulding of SMC, Visualisation and Inverse Modelling
title_short Compression Moulding of SMC, Visualisation and Inverse Modelling
title_full Compression Moulding of SMC, Visualisation and Inverse Modelling
title_fullStr Compression Moulding of SMC, Visualisation and Inverse Modelling
title_full_unstemmed Compression Moulding of SMC, Visualisation and Inverse Modelling
title_sort compression moulding of smc, visualisation and inverse modelling
publisher Luleå
publishDate 2005
url http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:ltu:diva-16860
work_keys_str_mv AT odenbergertorbjorn compressionmouldingofsmcvisualisationandinversemodelling
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