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| United States Patent | 4798954 |
| Link to this page | http://www.wikipatents.com/4798954.html |
| Inventor(s) | Stevenson; William A. (Concord, MA) |
| Abstract | A process for infrared spectroscopic monitoring of insitu compositional
changes in a polymeric material comprises the steps of providing an
elongated infrared radiation transmitting fiber that has a transmission
portion and a sensor portion, embedding the sensor portion in the
polymeric material to be monitored, subjecting the polymeric material to a
processing sequence, applying a beam of infrared radiation to the fiber
for transmission through the transmitting portion to the sensor portion
for modification as a function of properties of the polymeric material,
monitoring the modified infrared radiation spectra as the polymeric
material is being subjected to the processing sequence to obtain kinetic
data on changes in the polymeric material during the processing sequence,
and adjusting the processing sequence as a function of the kinetic data
provided by the modified infrared radiation spectra information. |
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Title Information  |
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Drawing from US Patent 4798954 |
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Monitoring technology |
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| Publication Date |
January 17, 1989 |
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| Filing Date |
February 3, 1987 |
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Title Information  |
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References  |
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| Market Size |
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| Reasonable Royalty |
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Public's "Guesstimation" of Royalty Value
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Market Review  |
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Technical Review  |
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Claims  |
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What is claimed is:
1. An infrared spectroscopy system for monitoring the processing of a
polymeric material comprising
a source of infrared radiation for generating a beam of infrared radiation,
infrared spectrum analyzing means,
an infrared radiation transmission fiber that has a transmission portion
and a sensor portion adapted to be embedded in the polymeric material to
be monitored, and
means for coupling said transmission fiber to said source to transmit a
beam of infrared radiation through said fiber to said sensor portion and
for coupling said fiber to said infrared spectrum analyzing means for
analyzing the resulting spectra as said polymeric material is processed to
provide kinetic information on the processing of said polymeric material.
2. The system of claim 1 wherein said source is of the Michelson
interferometer type.
3. The system of claim 1 wherein said spectrum analyzing means is of the
Fourier transform type.
4. The system of claim 1 wherein the material of said fiber is selected
from the class consisting of chalcogenide glass such as arsenic sulfide or
arsenic germanium selenide, heavy metal fluoride glass, such a mixture of
zirconium, barium, lanthanum and aluminum fluorides, and polycrystalline
or single crystal materials such as thallium bromoiodide or cesium iodide.
5. The system of claim 1 wherein said sensor fiber has a diameter of at
least about one hundred micrometers and a refractive index greater than
1.7.
6. The system of claim 1 wherein said sensor-transmitter fiber has a length
of at least about two meters with a clad transmission portion and an
unclad sensor portion, both of which are adapted to be embedded in the
polymer material to be monitored.
7. The system of claim 6 wherein said fiber has a diameter of at least
about one hundred micrometers, a refractive index greater than 1.7 and an
overall transmission loss of less than 5 dB per meter over an 1800-750
wavenumber bandwidth and said sensor portion of said fiber has a length
that is less than about five percent of the overall length of said fiber.
8. The system of claim 7 wherein the material of said fiber is selected
from the class consisting of chalcogenide glass such as arsenic sulfide or
arsenic germanium selenide, heavy metal fluoride glass, such as a mixture
of zirconium, barium, lanthanum and aluminum fluorides, and
polycrystalline or single crystal materials such as thallium bromoiodide
or cesium iodide.
9. The system of claim 1 wherein said sensor-transmitter fiber has an
overall transmission loss of less than 5 dB per meter over an 1800-750
wavenumber bandwidth.
10. A process for infrared spectroscopic monitoring of insitu compositional
changes in a polymeric material comprising the steps of
providing an elongated infrared radiation transmitting fiber that has a
transmission portion and a sensor portion,
embedding said sensor portion in the polymeric material to be monitored,
subjecting said polymeric material to a processing sequence,
applying a beam of infrared radiation to said fiber for transmission
through said transmitting portion to said sensor portion for modification
as a function of properties of the polymeric material, and
monitoring the modified infrared radiation spectra as said polymeric
material is being subjected to said processing sequence to obtain kinetic
data on changes in the polymeric material during the processing sequence.
11. The process of claim 10 and further including the step of adjusting the
processing sequence as a function of the kinetic data provided by said
modified infrared radiation spectra information.
12. The process of claim 10 wherein a polymer-fiber matrix is being
monitored, said polymer-fiber matrix including alternating layers of
fibers and polymer resins, and the sensor portions of a plurality of said
infrared radiation transmitting fibers are embedded in spaced relation in
said polymer resin layers.
13. The process of claim 12 wherein said polymeric material being monitored
is selected from the class consisting of epoxies and polyimides.
14. The process of claim 13 wherein the material of said infrared radiation
transmitting fibers is selected from the class consisting of chalcogenide
glass such as arsenic sulfide or arsenic germanium selenide, heavy metal
fluoride glass, such a mixture of zirconium, barium, lanthanum and
aluminum fluorides, and polycrystalline or single crystal materials such
as thallium bromoiodide or cesium iodide.
15. A elongated infrared radiation transmitting process monitoring fiber
for use in the process of claim 10, said fiber having a transmission
portion and a sensor portion, said fiber having a length of at least about
one meter and said sensor portion having a length that is less than about
five percent of the overall length of said fiber.
16. The fiber of claim 15 wherein said fiber has an overall transmission
loss of less than 5 dB per meter over an 1800-750 wavenumber bandwidth, a
diameter of at least about one hundred micrometers, a refractive index
greater than 1.7, said sensor portion is unclad, and said transmission
portion is clad.
17. The fiber of claim 16 wherein the material of said fiber is selected
from the class consisting of chalcogenide glass such as arsenic sulfide or
arsenic germanium selenide, heavy metal fluoride glass, such a mixture of
zirconium, barium, lanthanum and aluminum fluorides, and polycrystalline
or single crystal materials such as thallium bromoiodide or cesium iodide.
18. A system for insitu infrared spectroscopic monitoring of a
polymer-fiber matrix to provide kinetic information during the curing of
the polymeric constituent of said polymeric fiber matrix, said
polymer-fiber matrix including alternating layers of fibers and polymer
resins, comprising
a plurality of infrared radiation transmitting fibers, each said fiber
having a transmission portion and a sensor portion, the sensor portions of
said fibers being adapted to be embedded in spaced relation in said layers
of polymer resin,
a source of infrared radiation for generating a beam of infrared radiation,
means for coupling said transmitting fibers to said source to transmit
infrared radiation through said fibers to said sensor portions,
infrared spectrum analyzing means, and
means for coupling said fibers to said infrared spectrum analyzing means
for analyzing the resulting infrared spectra as said polymer resin
constituents are being cured to provide kinetic information on the curing
of said polymer resins.
19. The system of claim 18 wherein each said infrared radiation
transmitting fiber has a diameter of at least about one hundred
micrometers and a length of at least about one meter, each said
transmission portion is clad and each said sensor portion is unclad, each
said sensor portion has a length that is less than about five percent of
the overall length of its fiber.
20. The system of claim 19 wherein the material of said infrared radiation
transmitting fibers is selected from the class consisting of chalcogenide
glass such as arsenic sulfide or arsenic germanium selenide, heavy metal
fluoride glass, such a mixture of zirconium, barium, lanthanum and
aluminum fluorides, and polycrystalline or single crystal materials such
as thallium bromoiodide or cesium iodide; said polymer-fiber matrix
includes fiber of material such as graphite or boron and polymers of
materials such as epoxies or polyimides; each said infrared radiation
transmitting fiber has a refractory index greater than 1.7 and an overall
transmission loss of less than 5 dB per meter over an 1800-750 wavenumber
bandwidth; and further including autoclave type containment structure for
receiving said polymer-fiber matrix during cure, said containment
structure including gland structure through said transmission portions of
said fibers are connected to said infrared radiation source and said
infrared spectrum analyzer means. |
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Claims  |
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Description  |
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This invention relates to monitoring technology, and more particularly to
technology for monitoring the processing of polymeric materials and the
like.
Characteristics of polymeric materials are functions of processing or other
environmental factors to which they are exposed. For example,
thermosetting polymeric materials are typically exposed during a curing
sequence to changing temperature and pressure conditions over a time
interval which curing sequence produces compositional changes in the
polymeric material. Similar changes in molecular and crystal structures
occur in the processing of thermoplastic materials. In thermoset matrix
composites, for example, the ultimate properties of the part depend to a
significant extent upon the resin being fully cross-linked or cured.
Fiber reinforced composite materials possess desirable properties that make
them attractive as structural materials for applications in the aerospace,
automotive, marine and other industries, such desirable properties
including strength and stiffness values significantly higher than
comparable monolithic materials due to the reinforcing fibers; the ability
to use various materials in such composites including polymer-matrix,
metal-matrix and ceramic-matrix compositions to provide a wide range of
mechanical, thermal and chemical properties and the like, as well as the
ability to tailor such composites to obtain desirable properties, for
example by changing the fiber or matrix material, or by changing fiber
orientation.
Thermoset laminated composites form excellent structures if appropriate
process conditions are accurately known and rigorously followed.
Unfortunately, in practice, it has been difficult to translate appropriate
process conditions into production, the resulting products lacking
reproducibility due to inadequate process control information, which leads
to costly discards. Frequently a test coupon made of a similar layup is
processed simultaneously with the desired part and the test coupon is
subjected to destructive testing to determine degree of cure, voids, etc.
within the part. Unfortunately, the test coupon will frequently pass but
the part will not be up to specifications. Nondestructive testing
techniques that have been employed include infrared spectroscopy
technology for characterizing material at or near the surface, ultrasonic
scanning, dielectric cure monitoring, acoustic emission, X-radiography and
thermochromic analysis. None of these efforts have provided adequate
process control information.
In accordance with one aspect of the invention, there is provided a system
for infrared spectroscopic monitoring of polymeric material to obtain
kinetic data on changes in compositional characteristics of the polymer
during a processing sequence that includes a source of infrared radiation
for generating a beam of infrared radiation, infrared spectrum analyzing
means, an infrared radiation transmission fiber that has a clad
transmission portion and an unclad sensor portion adapted to be embedded
in the polymeric material to be monitored, and means for coupling the
transmission fiber to the source to transmit a beam of infrared radiation
through the fiber to the sensor portion and for coupling the fiber to the
infrared spectrum analyzing means for analyzing the resulting spectra as
the polymeric material is processed to provide kinetic information on the
processing of the polymeric material.
Preferrably, the infrared analyzer includes Michelson interferometer type
apparatus that produces a modulated beam which is transmitted along the IR
transmitting link to the sensor as a broad band spectral input, the
radiation is modified by multiple internal reflections within the sensor
and the resulting modified spectrum radiation is transmitted to analyzer
for analysis.
The sensor preferably includes a chalcogenide glass such as arsenic sulfide
or arsenic germanium selenide, a heavy metal fluoride glass such as a
mixture of zirconium, barium, lanthanum and aluminum fluorides, or
polycrystalline or single crystal material such as thallium bromoiodide or
cesium iodide. Preferably, the sensor fiber has a diameter of at least
about one hundred micrometers but less than one millimeter and a
refractive index greater than 1.7. In a particular embodiment, the fiber
sensor-transmitter has a length of at least about two meters with a clad
transmission portion and an unclad sensor section, both of which are
embedded in the polymer material to be monitored. The overall transmission
losses of the fiber are preferably less than 5 dB per meter over an
1800-750 wavenumber bandwidth and the analyzer monitors radiation over an
5000-300 wavenumber bandwidth.
In a particular system for monitoring the curing of a polymer-matrix
composite of the type which employs fibers of material such as graphite or
boron and polymers of materials such as epoxies or polyimides, a plurality
of sensors are embedded in uncured polymer material in regions between
layers of fibers and connected by their transmission fiber portions
through appropriate glands of an autoclave system to a Fourier transform
infrared analyzer such as the Digilab FTS-60 system. The autoclave system
includes containment structure in which the polymer-matrix composite is
disposed and by means of which programmed temperature and pressure
conditions are applied to the laminate during a processing cycle of
several hours duration during which kinetic changes in chemical,
crystalline, molecular and like characteristics of the polymer such as
epoxide formation (for example, at 908 cm.sup.-1), H--C.dbd. bands (for
example, at 844 and 3096 cm.sup.-1), aliphatic C--H bands (for example, at
2921 cm.sup.-1), aromatic C--H bands (for example, at 3062 cm.sup.-1),
--SO.sub.2 -- bands (for example, at 1150 cm.sup.-1), imidization
characteristics (for example, at 1775 cm.sup.-1), and anhydride formation
(for example, at 1853 cm.sup.-1) wave numbers may be monitored and process
parameters adjusted as a function of such real time kinetic information.
In accordance with another aspect of the invention, there is provided a
process for infrared spectroscopic monitoring of insitu compositional
changes in a polymeric material comprising the steps of providing an
elongated infrared radiation transmitting fiber that has a transmission
portion and a sensor portion, embedding the sensor portion in the
polymeric material to be monitored, subjecting the polymeric material to a
processing sequence, applying a beam of infrared radiation to the fiber
for transmission through the transmitting portion to the sensor portion
for modification as a function of properties of the polymeric material,
and monitoring the modified infrared radiation spectra as the polymeric
material is being subjected to the processing sequence to obtain kinetic
data on changes in the polymeric material during the processing sequence.
Preferably, the process further includes the step of adjusting the
processing sequence as a function of the kinetic data provided by the
modified infrared radiation spectra information.
Other features and advantages of the invention will be seen as the
following description of particular embodiments progresses, in conjunction
with the drawings, in which:
FIG. 1 is diagram of a monitoring system in accordance with the invention;
FIG. 2 is an enlarged diagrammatic view of a portion of the polymer-matrix
composite being processed in the system of FIG. 1;
FIGS. 3 and 4 are enlarged diagrammatic views of sensor fiber systems in
accordance with the invention; and
FIG. 5 is a diagram indicating an optical coupling arrangement between the
sensor-transmitter fiber and the associated infrared spectroscopic
analyzer equipment.
DESCRIPTION OF PARTICULAR EMBODIMENTS
The composite processing system shown in FIG. 1 includes a pressure and
temperature controlled environment housing 10 in which autoclave assembly
12 is disposed. Assembly 12 includes mold plate 14 and bag structure 16
which houses laminate structure 20 that is to be processed. Structure 20
includes an alternating series of fiber layers 22 (which may, for example,
be woven) and uncured resin layers 24 that are disposed in stacked
relation. Sensors 26 are embedded in resin layers 24 and connected to
infrared transmission fibers 28 as indicated in FIG. 2. Surrounding
laminate structure 20 is flexible dam structure 30. Disposed below and
between laminate structure 20 and mold plate 14 is peel ply 32 and
sacrificial ply 34. Above laminate structure 20 and enclosed by bag 16 are
release fabric 36, bleeder plies 38, breather plies 40 ad caul plate 42.
Bag seal 44 extends around the periphery of the flexible dam structure 30,
and edge bleeder structure 46 is disposed between seal 44 and dam 30.
Coupled to edge bleeder 46 via passages 48 is mold-venting manifold which
is connected through coupling 52 to a pressure source which may apply
vacuum or atmospheric pressure depending on the particular application.
The IR transmission fibers to which sensors 26 are connected are bundled
(as indicated at 54) externally of the laminate structure 20 to be
processed and extend through seal glands 56 to infrared spectroscopy
analyzer apparatus that includes Michelson interferometer source 58 and
receiver analyzer 60 and may be a Digilab FTS-60 analyzer.
With reference to the diagrammatic view of FIG. 2, disposed in the resin 24
between the fiber layers 22 are IR transmitting fibers 62 that have a
sensor portion 26 and integral IR transmission portions 28. As indicated
in FIG. 3, the optical fiber 62 has polymeric or other suitable cladding
64 in transmission portions 28 and is unclad at the sensor portion 26 so
that portion is exposed and in direct contact with resin 24. The radiation
beam 66 from interferometer source 58 is applied to input end 68 and the
modified exit beam 70 at output end 72 is connected to detector and
processing apparatus 60. In another embodiment, shown in FIG. 4, the fiber
62' includes a single transmitter section 28' with cladding 64', unclad
sensor portion 26', and reflector structure 74 so that the transmitted
beam 66' as modified by absorbance at the sensor 26' is reflected back
through fiber 62' to the entrance end. In another embodiment, a composite
fiber has a sensing section 26 of chalcogenide glass and transmitting
sections 28 of heavy metal flouride glass. The optimal resin contact
length of the sensor 26 is a function of the refractive indices of the
fiber and the resin material to be monitored, epoxy and polyimide resins
typically having refractive indices in the range of 1.5 to 1.6.
Shown in FIG. 5 in diagrammatic form is a sensor-transmitter fiber 62 with
input coupling optics 80 that includes toroid 82 and cone 84 for coupling
the input beam 66 from the interferometer to the fiber 62, for multiple
internal reflections and modification by absorbance at the sensor region
26, and similar coupling optics 88 that includes toroid 90 and cone 92 for
directing the output beam 70 to the detector 60.
In an illustrative polyimide composite processing cycle, the laminate
structure 20 in autoclave 12 is initially at room temperature. The
temperature is gradually increased to 200.degree. F. and held for one half
hour after which full vacuum is applied and the temperature is ramped up
to 470.degree. F. at which time 250 pounds pressure is applied. The
temperature and pressure are held for a half hour and then the temperature
is again ramped up to about 630.degree. F., the laminate structure being
continued to be held under pressure for three hours and then the system
cooled to less than 200.degree. F. with vacuum vented and pressure
released, the total cycle duration being about six hours. During this
processing sequence, infrared spectra obtained by the analyzer 60 from the
several sensors 26 (which may number in the hundreds) provide information
on kinetic changes in chemical constituents and molecular structures of
the polyimide resin as it is being cured. Process control adjustments are
made on a real time basis as a function of the analytical information
obtained from the analyzer spectra so that the resulting laminates are of
greater uniformity and quality.
While particular embodiments of the invention have been shown and
described, other embodiments will be apparent to those skilled in the art,
and therefore it is not intended that the invention be limited to the
disclosed embodiments or to details thereof, and departures may be made
therefrom within the spirit and scope of the invention.
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Description  |
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