Polymer composite manufacturing  

Course Contents The course explores in depth the manufacturing of polymer composite structures and its underlying physics. By understanding the relationships among physics, part/material quality and the design of the manufacturing process, you will be able to critically assess any given manufacturing process. The course is built around a number of polymer composite manufacturing processes highly relevant to the current and future aerospace industry for the manufacturing of high-performance individual parts (autoclave processing of prepreg, liquid composite moulding, thermoplastic composite processing), for the assembling of complex structures (manufacturing of integrated structures, thermoplastic composite welding) and for end of life and recycling. The main basic physical phenomena governing polymer composites manufacturing, e.g. flow (of polymer and of fibres), void formation, curing, shrinkage and crystallization, are interwoven within the course. Study Goals At the end of this course, the student should be able to: Describe the common manufacturing processes used in aerospace industry in terms of processing steps, tooling and equipment as well as advantages, limitations and applicability. Correlate and analyse the processes and their principles/underlying physics with manufacturability, part quality and manufacturing design. Compare and evaluate the different processes for their suitability of manufacturing common components (aircraft wing, fuselage etc). Recognise manufacturing defects, identify their potential sources and recommend strategies to improve the quality of common manufacturing processes for simple component geometries to reduce scrap rate or to increase yield.
Presential
English
Polymer composite manufacturing
English

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