Fixed-width towpreg apparatus and process

Rasmussen; David E. ;   et al.

Patent Application Summary

U.S. patent application number 11/327396 was filed with the patent office on 2007-02-08 for fixed-width towpreg apparatus and process. This patent application is currently assigned to Zoltek Companies Inc.. Invention is credited to Joseph L. Barlow, Kurt R. Olsen, David E. Rasmussen, Ronald R. Roser, Kirk J. Samowitz.

Application Number20070029434 11/327396
Document ID /
Family ID36648181
Filed Date2007-02-08

United States Patent Application 20070029434
Kind Code A1
Rasmussen; David E. ;   et al. February 8, 2007

Fixed-width towpreg apparatus and process

Abstract

An apparatus and method for winding a towpreg having a spool winding machine having a rod-shaped body for mounting a core of a spool, wherein the core is shuttled on the rod-shaped body to allow the towpreg to maintain a straight path substantially normal to an axis of the rod-shaped body are disclosed.


Inventors: Rasmussen; David E.; (Sandy, UT) ; Roser; Ronald R.; (Salt Lake City, UT) ; Barlow; Joseph L.; (Riverton, UT) ; Samowitz; Kirk J.; (South Jordan, UT) ; Olsen; Kurt R.; (South Jordan, UT)
Correspondence Address:
    MORRISON & FOERSTER LLP
    1650 TYSONS BOULEVARD
    SUITE 300
    MCLEAN
    VA
    22102
    US
Assignee: Zoltek Companies Inc.
St. Louis
MO

Family ID: 36648181
Appl. No.: 11/327396
Filed: January 9, 2006

Related U.S. Patent Documents

Application Number Filing Date Patent Number
60641749 Jan 7, 2005

Current U.S. Class: 242/484
Current CPC Class: B29C 70/50 20130101; B29C 53/66 20130101; B29C 53/8016 20130101; B29C 2053/8025 20130101
Class at Publication: 242/484
International Class: B65H 54/28 20060101 B65H054/28

Claims



1. An apparatus for winding a towpreg, comprising a spool winding machine comprising a rod-shaped body for mounting a core of a spool, wherein the core is shuttled on the rod-shaped body to allow the towpreg to maintain a straight path substantially normal to an axis of the rod-shaped body.

2. The apparatus of claim 1, further comprising a spool shuttling carriage.

3. The apparatus of claim 2, further comprising a towpreg delivery head.

4. The apparatus of claim 2, further comprising a grooved roller that allows control of a width of the towpreg.

5. The apparatus of claim 4, further comprising a towpreg cooling device.

6. The apparatus of claim 5, wherein the towpreg cooling device is a towpreg cooling tunnel.

7. The apparatus of claim 5, wherein the towpreg cooling device is a towpreg chiller.

8. The apparatus of claim 5, further comprising a towpreg width measurement device.

9. The apparatus of claim 4, further comprising a towpreg speed regulation device for regulating a travel speed of the towpreg.

10. The apparatus of claim 9, wherein the grooved roller has a groove of a desired width and rotates in a direction of travel of the towpreg at a rotational speed resulting in a surface speed at the groove that is slower than the travel speed of the towpreg.

11. A method for winding a towpreg, comprising impregnating the towpreg with a resin and winding the towpreg on a core of a spool while simultaneously shuttling the core on a rod-shaped body to allow the towpreg to maintain a straight path substantially normal to an axis of the rod-shaped body.

12. The method of claim 11, further comprising shaping the towpreg to a desired width by passing the towpreg through a groove of a grooved roller.

13. The method of claim 12, further comprising passing the towpreg through a cooling device.

14. The method of claim 13, wherein the towpreg cooling device is a towpreg cooling tunnel.

15. The method of claim 11, further cooling the towpreg by contacting a rotating drum.

16. The method of claim 13, further comprising regulating a travel speed of the towpreg by a speed regulation device.

17. The method of claim 16, wherein the grooved roller has a groove of a desired width and rotates in a direction of travel of the towpreg at a rotational speed resulting in a surface speed at the groove that is slower than the travel speed of the towpreg.

18. The method of claim 11, further comprising passing the towpreg through a delivery head prior to the winding the towpreg on the core.
Description



RELATED APPLICATION

[0001] This application claims benefit from U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/641,749, filed Jan. 7, 2005, entitled "FIXED-WIDTH TOWPREG APPARATUS AND PROCESS," which is incorporated herein by reference.

FIELD OF INVENTION

[0002] This invention relates to an apparatus and method for manufacturing constant-width tow fibers ("tow" or "towpreg"), which are preferably resin-impregnated.

BACKGROUND OF INVENTION

[0003] There are a number of challenges involved in manufacturing a constant-width towpreg. Conventional processes of manufacturing a resin-impregnated towpreg require that the towpreg be oscillated back and forth for spooling onto a core of a spool. As a result of handling the towpreg in this way, one of the problems is that that the resin-impregnated fiber tow tends to vary its width, particularly because it is oscillated back and forth for spooling onto the core. The present invention avoids most of the problems that typically tend to vary the tow width.

SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

[0004] An embodiment of this invention is an apparatus for winding a towpreg, comprising a spool winding machine comprising a rod-shaped body for mounting a core of a spool, wherein the core is shuttled on the rod-shaped body to allow the towpreg to maintain a straight path substantially normal to an axis of the rod-shaped body. The apparatus could further comprise a spool shuttling carriage. The apparatus could further comprise a towpreg delivery head. The apparatus could further comprise a grooved roller that allows control of a width of the towpreg. The apparatus could further comprise a towpreg cooling device. The apparatus wherein the towpreg cooling device is a towpreg cooling tunnel. Preferably, the towpreg cooling device is a towpreg chiller. The apparatus could further comprise a towpreg width measurement device. The apparatus could further comprise a towpreg speed regulation device for regulating a travel speed of the towpreg. Preferably, the grooved roller has a groove of a desired width and rotates in a direction of travel of the towpreg at a rotational speed resulting in a surface speed at the groove that is slower than the travel speed of the towpreg.

[0005] Another embodiment is a method for winding a towpreg, comprising impregnating the towpreg with a resin and winding the towpreg on a core of a spool while simultaneously shuttling the core on a rod-shaped body to allow the towpreg to maintain a straight path substantially normal to an axis of the rod-shaped body.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION

[0006] One of the features of the spool winder of this invention is that the packaging spool core is shuttled back and forth on a rod-shaped body, e.g., a spline-type support shaft, in a pattern-controlled motion, allowing the fiber to proceed in a straight-line substantially normal to the axis of the rod-shaped body, through the impregnation and spooling process. This facilitates accurate width control of the product, an important benefit for material that is to be used in precise fiber placement operations.

[0007] In a preferred embodiment of the towpreg process of this invention, fibers are brought from a creel through an impregnation zone. Once impregnated with resin, the towpreg is shaped to a desired width by passing the towpreg over one or more grooved rollers, with the grooved rollers rotating in the direction of fiber travel, but at a slightly slower surface speed than the travel speed of the towpreg. This differential speed provides the benefits that one could achieve by passing the towpreg over a fixed bar for width control of the towpreg, but further provides a self-cleaning feature that is absent in a fixed bar due to the rotation of the grooved rollers. Optionally, the towpreg could be passed over and under a number of fixed impregnating bars to assist impregnation of the resin between the fibers of the towpreg and, at the same time over the grooved rollers to establish a width in accordance with the dimension of the grooves of the grooved rollers.

[0008] With the towpreg at a desired width after being impregnated with resin and traversing through the groove of the grooved rollers, in one embodiment the towpreg then passes through a refrigerated tunnel where its temperature is lowed by air convection. This chilling step substantially fixes or freezes the towpreg width as it goes into the next stage of the process which could be a puller. The puller could include two or more relatively large rotating drums having grooves and sidewalls. The rotating drums could be liquid chilled and could pull the towpreg through the entire process up to the location of the rotating drums. Sidewalls on the rotating drum grooves fix the final width of the towpreg by restricting width-expansion due to fiber tension normal forces.

[0009] Variations of the preferred embodiment of this embodiment of the claimed apparatus could include a tow sizing unit, tow width measurement unit, tow heating unit, flattening/guide rollers, tow sizing wheel and pressure roller and cooling devices as those disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 5,397,523, which is incorporated in entirety herein by reference.

[0010] The claimed apparatus could potentially be used for any fiber including glass, carbon, aramid, boron, ceramic, and basalt. With shape variations in the drum and roller grooves, the towpreg cross-section may be varied from a rectangular to an oval, each of various dimensions.

EXAMPLES

[0011] The spool winder itself could be a programmable filament-winding machine that is programmed to rotate the spool winder in a particular winding configuration. In the preferred embodiment of this invention, the oscillating carriage of the winder does not move the delivery head of the towpreg, but rather it shuttles the towpreg spool core back and forth on a spline. Shuttling of the spool core allows the towpreg to maintain a straight path. An axial stationary rotating eye head orients the fiber band properly for winding it on the traversing core.

[0012] A diagram of the apparatus of the preferred embodiment of this invention is shown in FIG. 1, wherein a resin impregnated towpreg travels from the right to the left during the process of winding the towpreg. In particular the details of the component of the towpreg winding apparatus of FIG. 1 are provided below:

(A) Width-control impregnation rollers: Heated and rotating at a slower surface speed than that of the fiber travel.

(B) Towpreg cooling tunnel: Air refrigerated and thermostatically controlled with fans to create air turbulence for increase heat transfer.

(C) Towpreg chiller/puller and fiber-length measurement: Puller has width and shape control grooves. Length measurement is accomplished with the attachment of a revolution counter or encoder.

(D) Laser micrometer tow-width measurement and/or mass measurement with commercially available gamma or beta gage mass measurement systems and data logging.

(E) Machine take-up speed-regulation dancer wheel to maintain tow tension between puller and winder.

(F) Rotating eye delivery head to orient the fiber at a proper angle for helical winding at the spool.

(G) Spool winding machine and splined shaft spindles for traversing core spooling. Multiple spindles may be used by incorporating a slip-clutch drive to all but the master spindle, to maintain tension in all spooling.

(H) Spool shuttling carriage controlled by a winding pattern for a programmed helical or circumferential wind.

Test Methods and Results

[0013] Controlled tow properties include tow width, height, density, and fiber resin ratio. Quality issues include non-wrinkling of the fibers and non-breaking of the fibers in the process. These various properties are measured by the following tests: [0014] A) Weighing and measuring specific lengths of processed towpreg. With a known fiber weight per length before impregnation, this test determines fiber resin ratio as well as a towpreg density when coupled with dimensional data. [0015] B) Solvent washout of the uncured resin by hanging a tow section in a laboratory cylinder of solvent. This test is used to observe fiber breakage since broken fibers will fall down in the cylinder as the supporting resin is dissolved out with a solvent such as acetone. [0016] C) Panel testing. This test involves manufacturing of test panels using the produced material and then running various tests such as tension, bending, and impact, to determine strength translation of the fibers into finished products. [0017] D) Fiber wet-out observation. For a towpreg to effectively function as intended, good wet-out must occur at the impregnation part of the process. Wet-out can be observed by manually pulling samples of the towpreg apart to observe dry streaks if they exist.

[0018] E) Width of the towpreg is measured with a laser micrometer and the resultant data may be recorded and analyzed. Typical data from quality control procedures is listed in the table below: TABLE-US-00001 Manufacture Process Spool Width Standard Date Batch # Identification (mm) Deviation Aug. 30, 2005 117 1A 16.75 0.162 Aug. 30, 2005 117 1E 16.39 0.188 Aug. 30, 2005 117 2A 16.67 0.125 Aug. 30, 2005 117 2D 16.47 0.166 Aug. 31, 2005 117 3A 16.65 0.066 Aug. 31, 2005 117 3C 16.47 0.204 Sep. 1, 2005 117 4A 16.63 0.082 Sep. 1, 2005 117 4B 16.61 0.079 Sep. 1, 2005 117 5A 16.6 0.104 Sep. 1, 2005 117 5E 16.43 0.143 Sep. 12, 2005 118 1A 16.486 0.217 Sep. 12, 2005 118 1E 16.368 0.242 Sep. 12, 2005 118 2A 16.536 0.087 Sep. 12, 2005 118 2D 16.477 0.171 Sep. 13, 2005 118 3A 16.578 0.105 Sep. 13, 2005 118 3C 16.56 0.145 Sep. 13, 2005 118 4A 16.604 0.096 Sep. 13, 2005 118 4B 16.542 0.174 Sep. 13, 2005 118 5A 16.597 0.154 Sep. 13, 2005 118 5B 16.447 0.203 Sep. 14, 2005 118 6A 16.63 0.108 Sep. 14, 2005 118 6D 16.376 0.172 Sep. 14, 2005 118 7A 16.62 0.111 Sep. 14, 2005 118 7C 16.59 0.113

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