Optical Coherence Tomography - A New Method For Evaluating The Quality Of Thermoplastic Glass-Fiber-Reinforced Unidirectional Tapes

  • Michael Wenninger (Speaker)

Activity: Talk or presentationContributed talkscience-to-science

Description

Optical coherence tomography (OCT), originally developed for biomedical applications, has been found to be a powerful tool for the non-destructive testing and characterization of polymeric matrix composites. Increasingly, the thermosets, previously used as the only matrix material in these composites, are being replaced by thermoplastics. Thus, the issue of appropriate and reliable quality assessment has arisen. This study evaluated OCT as a technique for detecting common quality defects in the continuous production of thermoplastic glass-fiber-reinforced unidirectional (UD) tapes. Stationary offline measurements using a spectral domain OCT system were carried out to investigate typical defects, namely filled/unfilled gaps, fiber breakage, dry fiber regions, bubbles, and edge defects. While edge defects, dry regions, fiber breakage and empty gaps were successfully detected, polymer-filled gaps and small bubbles on the tape surface posed a greater challenge. We show that OCT is a powerful non-destructive high-resolution method for defect detection in glass-fiber-reinforced UD tapes that has great potential for inline quality assessment during continuous production.
Period13 Apr 2022
Event title37th International Conference of the Polymer Processing Society
Event typeConference
LocationJapanShow on map

Fields of science

  • 205012 Polymer processing
  • 205 Materials Engineering
  • 102009 Computer simulation
  • 205011 Polymer engineering
  • 102033 Data mining
  • 104018 Polymer chemistry
  • 104019 Polymer sciences
  • 502058 Digital transformation
  • 502059 Circular economy

JKU Focus areas

  • Digital Transformation
  • Sustainable Development: Responsible Technologies and Management