Publication | Closed Access
Morphological and mechanical analyses of laminates manufactured from randomly positioned carbon fibre/epoxy resin prepreg scraps
13
Citations
10
References
2017
Year
Materials ScienceFiber ReinforcementFibre-reinforced PlasticTextile CompositesCompositesEngineeringMechanical EngineeringMechanical AnalysesComposite TechnologyRecyclingContinuous-fibre CompositeComposite Prepreg ScrapPolymer CompositesComposite ScrapsSustainable CompositePolymer Matrix CompositesFiber-reinforced CompositeAdded Value
This study aims to contribute to sustainability by proposing the reuse of composite prepreg scrap as an added value from discards. The research evaluates the microstructure and mechanical properties of laminates processed by the reuse of uncured carbon fibre/F155-epoxy resin prepreg scraps, waste from the ply cutting area of an aeronautical industry. The composite scraps were used as collected and were randomly positioned to produce laminates to be cured at an autoclave. The mechanical characterization shows a decrease of 39% for the compression property due to the discontinuous fibres in the laminate and an increase of 34% for the interlaminar shear strength, when compared to continuous fibre laminates. This increase is attributed to the higher crosslink density of the epoxy resin, as a result of the cure temperature used in autoclave (60 °C higher than suggested by supplier) and also to the randomly positioned scraps. Microscopic analyses confirm the consolidation of laminates, although show resin rich areas with different sizes and shapes attributed to the overlapping of the scraps with different sizes and shapes. These resin rich areas may contribute to decrease the mechanical properties of laminates. The correlation between mechanical and morphological results shows potential to be used on non-critical structural application, as composite jigs, contributing to sustainability.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1