Publication | Closed Access
Studies on Mechanical Behavior of Microwave and Thermally Cured Glass Fiber Reinforced Polymer Composites
37
Citations
7
References
2006
Year
Materials ScienceCompositesEngineeringMechanical PropertiesMechanical BehaviorGlass FiberMechanical EngineeringComposite TechnologyContinuous-fibre CompositePolymer CompositesMechanics Of MaterialsMicrowave-cured Glass–epoxy CompositesMicrowave CuringThermoplastic CompositeSustainable CompositePower ConsumptionPolymer Matrix CompositesFiber-reinforced Composite
An investigation into the mechanical behavior of microwave-cured glass–epoxy composites is carried out and the results are compared with those of thermally cured composites. Microwave curing of a glass fiber reinforced bifunctional epoxy resin system (LY556/HY951) is carried out in custom-built, multi-mode, industrial microwave cure equipment operating at a frequency of 2450 MHz. Through tensile, compression, and flexural strength tests, it is demonstrated that while the mechanical properties of microwave-cured composites compare well with those of the thermally cured ones, the microwave curing process, per se, results in a significant reduction in the process cycle time and power consumption.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1