CompositesWorld

FEB 2015

CompositesWorld

Issue link: https://cw.epubxp.com/i/450689

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 9 of 51

FEBRUARY 2015 8 CompositesWorld PERSPECTIVES & PROVOCATIONS » In the July 2013 issue of CW's predecessor, High-Performance Composites (HPC), I opined that the F-35 will be the last manned fghter aircraft. Tat was based on the indisputable fact that computing power will continue to grow signifcantly, making it possible for artifcial intelligence to exceed the capabilities of human pilots in combat. I also suggested this would open up new oppor- tunities for composites because a pilot-free aircraft could fy closer to the performance edge than a manned aircraft. In the October 2014 issue of HPC's sister publication, Composites Technology (CT), I followed that by bemoaning the slow rate of innovation in compos- ites compared to that of the consumer-electronics and informa- tion-technology industries. Te computing power in a single smart- phone exceeds that of a room full of processing hardware from 30 years ago, yet we still struggle to overcome the inherent barriers to composites in infrastructure, automobiles and aircraft. Having spent my career in the world of "making things," I have viewed computer-based modeling and simulation as a bunch of pretty pictures on a screen. One cannot drive to a restaurant in a virtual car or fy to Hawaii in a virtual airplane, I reasoned. (Well, you can, as in a video game, but you aren't physically traveling … not while teleportation remains a concept in science fction.) Real physical manufacturing — making tons of epoxy resin, laying up and curing prepregs, infusing textile preforms in a closed mold — is what puts composites into our bridges, our automobiles and the aircraft we fy. But then, most of my experience with computer modeling/simulation has been sitting next to a CAD or FEA expert, suggesting manufacturing-friendly draft angles or radii for a part, or proposing initial starting laminate schedules, then reviewing the outcomes of stress plots to determine where more material needs to be added or can be taken away. Yes, all pretty rudimentary stuf. Over the past few years, however, I've been impressed with mold-flling analysis of high-pressure RTM, and with thermal modeling, which uses computational fuid dynamics of liquid heat transfer media, with improving accuracy in real-world valida- tion. As a result, I've come to believe, in a big way, that computing power has the potential to truly transform the composites industry. Tis past December, I attended CompositesWorld's Carbon Fiber 2014 conference (San Diego, CA, US), and I was able to drop in on BIOVIA, a subsidiary of the software giant Dassault Systèmes (Velizy- Villacoublay, France), probably best known for the CAD program CATIA. I was given a demonstration of a product called Materials Studio, which models substances at the molecular and atomic levels, and simulates how these materials interact and interface with other materials. Such tools are already being used by the pharmaceutical industry to develop new drugs, and several advanced composite material suppliers are looking at how they might use them to design new resins and improve fber/matrix adhesion. In theory, the properties mapped at a molecular level could be scaled all the way to full-sized parts, with the ability to accu- rately predict the performance of an aircraft wing or a vehicular bridge without having to build and test numerous coupons and sub-elements. Te term Integrated Computational Materials Engineering, or ICME, has been coined to defne this concept. Although I believe we are still some years away from being able to span this entire range, there are numerous computational tools out there today that — properly integrated — ofer the ability to take basic materials data, assemble it, and help us to design both parts and manufacturing processes. Tis would reduce costs and enhance the acceptance of composites. So, what will it take to make all this a reality? First and foremost, there needs to be considerable cooperation among the various simulation/design software companies. Competitors will need to collaborate to ensure that digital designs can be incorporated into models that predict crash behavior and then translate to simula- tion tools that predict manufacturing parameters, such as pressure, time and temperature. Tis, in turn, will ensure a good part without excessive voids or other defects. And that will involve common protocols for exchanging information. Hosting these disparate tools on a single platform, such as the evolving Composites Design and Manufacturing Hub (cdmHUB) at Purdue University, is a major step in getting all the software providers to work together. Even more important is getting all us manufacturing "old- timers" to buy in and start using these software tools, especially the more sophisticated ones, to reduce the amount of empirical learning during the product development process. We can be a stubborn bunch, and will need to see lots of real-world validation of this method on the shop foor. I know I'm ready — and I believe a lot of others will be as well. Modeling and simulation: Is ICME the next composites breakthrough? I've come to believe .... that computing power has the potential to truly transform the composites industry. Dale Brosius is the head of his own consulting company, which serves clients in the composites industry worldwide. Services include strategic planning, market analysis, assistance in mergers and acquisitions activities and technical support. His career has included positions at US-based frms, Dow Chemical Co. (Midland, MI), Fiberite (Tempe, AZ) and successor Cytec Industries Inc. (Woodland Park, NJ), and Bankstown Airport, NSW, Australia-based Quickstep Holdings. For three years he also served as the general chair of the Society of Plastics Engineers' annual Automotive Composites Conference and Exhibition. Brosius has a BS in chemical engineering from Texas A&M; University and an MBA.

Articles in this issue

Archives of this issue

view archives of CompositesWorld - FEB 2015