TY - JOUR
T1 - A focused review of the draping process and its impact on the resin infusion in Liquid Composite Molding
AU - Lu, Xing
AU - Ding, Junchun
AU - Peng, Xiongqi
AU - Sun, Guangyong
AU - Wang, Xukang
AU - Yue, Wuyang
AU - Zhou, Helezi
AU - Huang, Zhigao
AU - Zhou, Huamin
AU - Mai, Yiu Wing
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 Elsevier Ltd
PY - 2024/12
Y1 - 2024/12
N2 - The draping process of textile reinforcements is the first and one of the most critical steps in manufacturing continuous fiber-reinforced polymer composites by Liquid Composite Molding (LCM), i.e., two-dimensional flat textiles are adapted to three-dimensional geometry. The textile deformation caused by draping will decide key physical quantities (fiber orientation, fiber volume content, and defects), significantly affecting the subsequent resin infusion behavior. Several reviews have discussed the draping process but have not established a strong connection with the infusion process in LCM. Thus, in this focused review, we discuss the CAE chain reported in previous published literatures which illustrated the significant impact of the draping process on the infusion process. A comprehensive understanding of the draping process is a prerequisite for accurately modeling the infusion process. In detail, deformation mechanisms, draping simulation approaches, and phenomena predicted by the draping process, are reviewed and discussed. Then, the impacts of three deformation behaviors of textiles (shear, compaction, and defects) on the resin infusion are discussed, respectively. Finally, macroscopic infusion simulation is discussed. This review will try to identify the gaps in the draping and infusion processes and contribute to developing the CAE chain of LCM.
AB - The draping process of textile reinforcements is the first and one of the most critical steps in manufacturing continuous fiber-reinforced polymer composites by Liquid Composite Molding (LCM), i.e., two-dimensional flat textiles are adapted to three-dimensional geometry. The textile deformation caused by draping will decide key physical quantities (fiber orientation, fiber volume content, and defects), significantly affecting the subsequent resin infusion behavior. Several reviews have discussed the draping process but have not established a strong connection with the infusion process in LCM. Thus, in this focused review, we discuss the CAE chain reported in previous published literatures which illustrated the significant impact of the draping process on the infusion process. A comprehensive understanding of the draping process is a prerequisite for accurately modeling the infusion process. In detail, deformation mechanisms, draping simulation approaches, and phenomena predicted by the draping process, are reviewed and discussed. Then, the impacts of three deformation behaviors of textiles (shear, compaction, and defects) on the resin infusion are discussed, respectively. Finally, macroscopic infusion simulation is discussed. This review will try to identify the gaps in the draping and infusion processes and contribute to developing the CAE chain of LCM.
KW - Draping
KW - Infusion
KW - Liquid Composites Molding
KW - Textile reinforcements
KW - The CAE chain
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85202341943&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.tws.2024.112362
DO - 10.1016/j.tws.2024.112362
M3 - Review article
AN - SCOPUS:85202341943
SN - 0263-8231
VL - 205
JO - Thin-Walled Structures
JF - Thin-Walled Structures
M1 - 112362
ER -