Print Email Facebook Twitter Induction Welded Repairs in Carbon Fiber Thermoplastic Aircraft Structures Title Induction Welded Repairs in Carbon Fiber Thermoplastic Aircraft Structures Author Berkel, Alex (TU Delft Aerospace Engineering) Contributor Villegas, I.F. (mentor) Kassapoglou, C. (mentor) Labordus, Maarten (mentor) Alderliesten, R.C. (graduation committee) Bijleveld, J.C. (graduation committee) Degree granting institution Delft University of Technology Programme Aerospace Engineering | Structures and Materials Date 2018-04-23 Abstract This master thesis research investigates the possibility to repair carbon fiber thermoplastic aircraftstructures using induction welding. Carbon fiber is conductive and heats up when placed inside analternating magnetic field. A generator, coil, and pressure frame are needed to perform inductionwelding. The support plates needed to pressurize the carbon fiber parts need to be non-conductive,non-magnetic, temperature resistant, stiff at high temperatures, and thermally insulating.The material used is five harness satin weave carbon fiber PPS supplied in pre-consolidated platesand unconsolidated semi-preg. Three different joint geometries are used in this investigation: a conventionalscarf, a continuous scarf, and a stepped lap joint. The stepped lap joint and the conventionalscarf are milled using a CNC machine. The continuous scarf is produced in a press using specializedtooling and a press program prescribed by TenCate.Of each type two specimens are produced: an induction welded specimen and a press joined specimen.The specimens are tested in tension to determine the tensile strength and stiffness. This givesthe performance of the induction welded joints with respect to the press joined specimens. Additionally,both of the welded specimens are compared to the pristine specimens.By measuring the temperature along the weld-line of multiple test specimens, an induction weldingprogram is obtained for each joint type. Achieving a consistent temperature along the weld-line ischallenging due to the thermal conductivity of carbon fibers and other effects inside the laminate. Similarto the continuous scarfed specimens, the press joined specimens are created using specialized tooling.Before testing the specimens in tension, they are scanned using a C-scan. The press bondedspecimens show no flaws, whereas the induction welded specimens do not return the signal to thetransducer. Micrography of the specimens shows similar results as the C-scan. The press joinedspecimens show little to no flaws and the induction welded specimens show a significant amount ofvoids and small unjoined sections near the tips for the continuous scarf and stepped lap specimen.The tensile tests show that all induction welded joints perform less than the press joined specimenswith a percentage of about 73-78%. The conventional scarf and the continuous scarf result in a similarfailure strength recovery of about 44% of the pristine failure strength for the press joined specimens.Both the conventional scarf and the continuous scarf show similar behavior in welding and the tensiletesting, but the continuous scarf is more difficult to produce. Therefore the conventional scarf joint ispreferred over the continuous scarf joint. The stepped lap joint has the best performance, recoveringabout 59% of the pristine stiffness. The stiffness of all tested specimens is between 92%-99% of thepristine stiffness.Inspection using digital image correlation and finite element modeling indicates the failure initiatesinside the PPS matrix in between the parts at the location of the first or last step. Finite element modelingalso suggests that a smaller angle for the scarf joint or a longer overlap for the stepped lap joint wouldincrease failure strength. Subject InductionWeldingCFPPSKVEScarfStepped lapRepair To reference this document use: http://resolver.tudelft.nl/uuid:48371452-9817-4b02-95e2-89a28e750125 Embargo date 2023-04-23 Part of collection Student theses Document type master thesis Rights © 2018 Alex Berkel Files PDF Thesis_Alex_Berkel_414649 ... _Final.pdf 36.99 MB Close viewer /islandora/object/uuid:48371452-9817-4b02-95e2-89a28e750125/datastream/OBJ/view