Papers by Keyword: Reinforced Plastics

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Abstract: Fibre orientation in short fibre reinforced thermoplastics depends on injection moulding parameters. There are a lot of different parameters that must be established and controlled to achieve proper injection moulding of a plastic part. These parameters fall within four major areas: pressure, temperature, time, and distance. The aim of this article is estimation of fibre orientation in injection moulding plastics parts and comparison of these results with numerical simulated ones. Stereological metallography was used for estimation of experimental orientation of fibres. The orientation of simple fibre may be defined by the two angles θ and Φ. In a Short Fibre Reinforced Thermoplastic (SFRT) component there are frequently millions of fibres, therefore each individual fibre orientation specifying is very impractical. The fibres orientation in space can be described by the probability distribution function (PDF), Ψ(θ, Φ). Numerical modelling of fibre orientation was realised using MOLDEX3D software. Moldex3D is the CAE product for the plastics injection moulding industry. This software allows to view results of fibre orientation as an orientation of the X direction, Y direction, Z direction, the total orientation and orientation at surface. These first three orientations are relevant for the establishment of second-order orientation tensor. They belong to tensor ́s values a11, a22 and a33. Utilization of stereological metallography for short fibre orientation in plastic matrix is very similar to its utilization for estimation of grain boundaries orientation in polycrystalline alloys cased by plastic deformation. In the case of short glass fibres reinforced thermoplastics it’s structure consist of thermoplastic matrix and reinforcing fibres, which has some preferred orientation in most of cases – the structure is anisotropy. The way of scalar measurement of structure anisotropy is determination of degree of orientation. The anisotropic microstructure is decomposed into isotropic, planar or linear oriented components using stereology methods.
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Abstract: An investigation was carried out through a study of the influence of material anisotropy of the rounded corners of thin-walled plastic injection molded products reinforced by short-fibres, on the state of stress. It has been shown that the result of such injection-moulded processes is an anisotropic and layered product, whose mechanical behaviour differs for that of isotropic and homogenous solids. Unlike unreinforced plastics, fibre composites exhibit secondary stress effects thus need to be careful consideration in the course in designing of short fibres reinforced plastic products.
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Abstract: Structural plate elements in composite structures are typically fabricated by stacking orthotropic layers, each of which is composed of reinforcing fibers and matrix materials. In this work, three optimum design approaches are compared to clarify the advantages and disadvantages for optimizing the buckling performance of laminated composite plates. The first approach is developed recently by the authors, where the buckling load is maximized with respect to the lamination parameters by a gradient method and then the optimum lay-up design is determined by minimizing the errors between the optimum parameters and parameters for all possible discrete lay-ups. The second approach is the layerwise optimization (LO) approach where the fiber orientation angle in each layer is optimized step-by-step by repeating one dimensional search. The third one is a direct application of a simple genetic algorithm (SGA). In numerical examples, three sets of results are compared to discuss on the methodology for buckling optimization.
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