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Composites: Made Faster - Rapid, physics-based simulation tools for composite manufacture

Reference Number
EP/V039210/1
Title
Composites: Made Faster - Rapid, physics-based simulation tools for composite manufacture
Status
Completed
Energy Categories
Energy Efficiency(Transport)
Not Energy Related
Research Types
Basic and strategic applied research
Science and Technology Fields
PHYSICAL SCIENCES AND MATHEMATICS (Metallurgy and Materials)
PHYSICAL SCIENCES AND MATHEMATICS (Statistics and Operational Research)
PHYSICAL SCIENCES AND MATHEMATICS (Computer Science and Informatics)
ENGINEERING AND TECHNOLOGY (Mechanical, Aeronautical and Manufacturing Engineering)
UKERC Cross Cutting Characterisation
Not Cross-cutting
Principal Investigator
Dr SR Hallett
Aerospace Engineering
University of Bristol
Award Type
Standard
Funding Source
EPSRC
Start Date
01 December 2021
End Date
31 August 2025
Duration
45 months
Total Grant Value
£812,735
Industrial Sectors
Manufacturing
Region
South West
Programme
Manufacturing : Manufacturing
Investigators
Principal Investigator
Dr SR Hallett, Aerospace Engineering, University of Bristol
Other Investigator
Professor T J Dodwell, Engineering, University of Exeter
Industrial Collaborator
Project Contact, Rolls-Royce PLC
Project Contact, BAE Systems Integrated System Technologies Limited
Project Contact, M Wright & Sons Ltd
Project Contact, CFMS Services Limited
Project Contact, National Composites Centre
Project Contact, LMAT Ltd
Project Contact, Advanced Manufacturing Research Centre
Project Contact, Airborne (UK)
Project Contact, Carbon Three Sixty
Project Contact, Airbus UK Ltd
Web Site
Objectives
Abstract
Composite materials are becoming increasingly important for light-weight solutions in the transport and energy sectors. Reduced structural weight, with improved mechanical performance is essential to achieve aerospace and automotive's sustainability objectives, through reduced fuel-burn, as well as facilitating new technologies such as electric and hydrogen fuels. The nature of fibre reinforced composite materials however makes them highly susceptible to variation during the different stages of their manufacture. This can result in significant reductions in their mechanical performance and design tolerances not being met, reducing their weight saving advantages through requiring "over design".Modelling methods able to simulate the different processes involved in composite manufacture offer a powerful tool to help mitigate these issues early in the design stage. A major challenge in achieving good simulations is to consider the variability, inherent to both the material and the manufacturing processes, so that the statistical spread of possible outcomes is considered rather than a single deterministic result. To achieve this, a probabilistic modelling framework is required, which necessitates rapid numerical tools for modelling each step in the composite manufacturing process.Focussing specifically on textile composites, this project will develop a new bespoke solver, with methods to simulate preform creation, preform deposition and finally, preform compaction, three key steps of the composite manufacturing process. Aided by new and developing processor architectures, this bespoke solver will deliver a uniquely fast, yet accurate simulation capability.The methods developed for each process will be interrogated through systematic probabilistic sensitivity analyses to reduce their complexity while retaining their predictive capability. The aim being to find a balance between predictive capability and run-time efficiency. This will ultimately provide a tool that is numerically efficient enough to run sufficient iterations to capture the significant stochastic variation present in each of the textile composite manufacturing processes, even at large, component scale.The framework will then be applied to industrially relevant problems. Accounting for real-world variability, the tools will be used to optimise the processes for use in design and to further to explore the optimising of manufacturing processes.Close collaboration with the project's industrial partners and access to their demonstrator and production manufacturing data will ensure that the tools created are industry relevant and can be integrated within current design processes to achieve immediate impact. This will enable a step change in manufacturing engineers' ability to reach an acceptable solution with significantly fewer trials, less waste and faster time to market, contributing to the digital revolution that is now taking place in industry.
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Added to Database
11/01/22