ansys Archives - Composites Today https://www.compositestoday.com/tag/ansys/ Latest news and information from the composites industry Thu, 16 Jan 2020 09:09:54 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8.3 https://i0.wp.com/www.compositestoday.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/01/cropped-img-site-ident-1.png?fit=32%2C32&ssl=1 ansys Archives - Composites Today https://www.compositestoday.com/tag/ansys/ 32 32 22188208 Researchers Create New Method of Producing Composites Without the Heavy Machinery https://www.compositestoday.com/2020/01/mit-new-composites-method-no-autoclave/ Thu, 16 Jan 2020 09:09:54 +0000 https://www.compositestoday.com/?p=15075 A modern aeroplane’s fuselage is made from multiple sheets of different composite materials, like so many layers in a phyllo-dough pastry. Once these layers are stacked and moulded into the shape of a fuselage, the structures are wheeled into warehouse-sized ovens and autoclaves, where the layers fuse together to form a resilient, aerodynamic shell. Now MIT engineers have developed a method to produce aerospace-grade composites without the enormous ovens and pressure vessels. The technique may help to speed up the […]

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A modern aeroplane’s fuselage is made from multiple sheets of different composite materials, like so many layers in a phyllo-dough pastry. Once these layers are stacked and moulded into the shape of a fuselage, the structures are wheeled into warehouse-sized ovens and autoclaves, where the layers fuse together to form a resilient, aerodynamic shell.

Now MIT engineers have developed a method to produce aerospace-grade composites without the enormous ovens and pressure vessels. The technique may help to speed up the manufacturing of aeroplanes and other large, high-performance composite structures, such as blades for wind turbines.

The researchers detail their new method in a paper published in the journal Advanced Materials Interfaces.

If you’re making a primary structure like a fuselage or wing, you need to build a pressure vessel, or autoclave, the size of a two- or three-story building, which itself requires time and money to pressurize. These things are massive pieces of infrastructure. Now we can make primary structure materials without autoclave pressure, so we can get rid of all that infrastructure. Brian Wardle, professor of aeronautics and astronautics at MIT

Wardle’s co-authors on the paper are lead author and MIT postdoc Jeonyoon Lee, and Seth Kessler of Metis Design Corporation, an aerospace structural health monitoring company based in Boston.

Out of the oven, into a blanket

In 2015, Lee led the team, along with another member of Wardle’s lab, in creating a method to make aerospace-grade composites without requiring an oven to fuse the materials together. Instead of placing layers of material inside an oven to cure, the researchers essentially wrapped them in an ultrathin film of carbon nanotubes (CNTs). When they applied an electric current to the film, the CNTs, like a nanoscale electric blanket, quickly generated heat, causing the materials within to cure and fuse together.

With this out-of-oven, or OoO, technique, the team was able to produce composites as strong as the materials made in conventional aeroplane manufacturing ovens, using only 1 per cent of the energy.

The researchers next looked for ways to make high-performance composites without the use of large, high-pressure autoclaves — building-sized vessels that generate high enough pressures to press materials together, squeezing out any voids, or air pockets, at their interface.

Researchers including Wardle’s group have explored “out-of-autoclave,” or OoA, techniques to manufacture composites without using the huge machines. But most of these techniques have produced composites where nearly 1 per cent of the material contains voids, which can compromise a material’s strength and lifetime. In comparison, aerospace-grade composites made in autoclaves are of such high quality that any voids they contain are negligible and not easily measured.

Image: courtesy of the researchers

Straw pressure

Part of Wardle’s work focuses on developing nanoporous networks — ultrathin films made from aligned, microscopic material such as carbon nanotubes, that can be engineered with exceptional properties, including colour, strength, and electrical capacity. The researchers wondered whether these nanoporous films could be used in place of giant autoclaves to squeeze out voids between two material layers, as unlikely as that may seem.

A thin film of carbon nanotubes is somewhat like a dense forest of trees, and the spaces between the trees can function like thin nanoscale tubes or capillaries. A capillary such as a straw can generate pressure based on its geometry and its surface energy, or the material’s ability to attract liquids or other materials.

The researchers tested their idea in the lab by growing films of vertically aligned carbon nanotubes using a technique they previously developed, then laying the films between layers of materials that are typically used in the autoclave-based manufacturing of primary aircraft structures. They wrapped the layers in a second film of carbon nanotubes, which they applied an electric current to heat it up. They observed that as the materials heated and softened in response, they were pulled into the capillaries of the intermediate CNT film.

The resulting composite lacked voids, similar to aerospace-grade composites that are produced in an autoclave. The researchers subjected the composites to strength tests, attempting to push the layers apart, the idea being that voids, if present, would allow the layers to separate more easily.

The team will next look for ways to scale up the pressure-generating CNT film. In their experiments, they worked with samples measuring several centimetres wide — large enough to demonstrate that nanoporous networks can pressurize materials and prevent voids from forming. To make this process viable for manufacturing entire wings and fuselages, researchers will have to find ways to manufacture CNT and other nanoporous films at a much larger scale.

He plans also to explore different formulations of nanoporous films, engineering capillaries of varying surface energies and geometries, to be able to pressurize and bond other high-performance materials.

This research was supported, in part, by Airbus, ANSYS, Embraer, Lockheed Martin, Saab AB, Saertex, and Teijin Carbon America through MIT’s Nano-Engineered Composite aerospace Structures (NECST) Consortium.

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Ansys Acquires Evolutionary Engineering https://www.compositestoday.com/2013/04/ansys-acquires-even-evolutionary-engineering/ https://www.compositestoday.com/2013/04/ansys-acquires-even-evolutionary-engineering/#comments Mon, 08 Apr 2013 07:28:17 +0000 http://www.compositestoday.com/?p=7362 Ansys have announced the acquisition of Evolutionary Engineering AG, a provider of composite analysis and optimisation technologies.The company will now become Ansys Switzerland, a wholly owned subsidiary of Ansys, Inc. Headquartered in Zurich, Evolutionary Engineering has 12 employees and has been a partner of ANSYS, offering composite technologies through a product called ANSYS Composite PrepPost. The increased popularity in using advanced composite materials has fostered the need for new design, analysis and optimisation technology and this acquisition by Ansys has […]

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Ansys have announced the acquisition of Evolutionary Engineering AG, a provider of composite analysis and optimisation technologies.The company will now become Ansys Switzerland, a wholly owned subsidiary of Ansys, Inc.

Headquartered in Zurich, Evolutionary Engineering has 12 employees and has been a partner of ANSYS, offering composite technologies through a product called ANSYS Composite PrepPost.

The increased popularity in using advanced composite materials has fostered the need for new design, analysis and optimisation technology and this acquisition by Ansys has emphasised the high priority they are giving to this technology. Composites pose many challenges for R&D teams that need to identify the appropriate formulation for a required use. To successfully produce layered composites, engineers must define the optimal material formula, which depends on the number of layers involved along with the thickness and relative orientation of each layer.

We are very pleased that our long-standing partner relationship with the EVEN team has resulted in EVEN becoming part of the ANSYS family, composites simulation is a fast growing market with application across multiple industries, broadening our industry knowledge and competencies in this area. The tight coupling of the EVEN products within our platform is highly beneficial, so we look forward to working with the EVEN employees and customers.
Jim Cashman President and CEO of ANSYS

Ansys Composite PrepPost is a processing solution for layered composite materials integrated into the Ansys software portfolio. The product will model the most complex composite structures while, at the same time, fully understand the potential failure of product models. Users can subject product designs to simple physical stresses and compute progressive damage, delamination and cracking. The technology’s post-processing capabilities enable users to conduct in-depth investigations of ultimate product integrity and behavior. Users can view global results or conduct detailed analysis at the level of individual layers.

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