In Situ Polymerisation during Monomer Infusion Under Flexible Tooling (MIFT)

John Summerscales, Yang Qin, Richard Pemberton, Maozhou Meng, Jasper Graham-Jones

Research output: Contribution to conferencePaperpeer-review

Abstract


A significant majority of large fibre composite structures in the marine environment currently use a thermoset resin matrix. These materials have excellent durability in the sea, but are difficult to dispose of at end-of-life. After a rigorous selection process [1], methyl methacrylate and lactide monomers have been identified as potential thermoplastic matrix systems which can be manufactured using in situ polymerisation (ISP) during composite manufacture by liquid composite moulding (LCM) processes. LCM includes resin transfer moulding (RTM) for components up to about 3 m square, then Infusion under Flexible Tooling (RIFT for resins, or MIFT for monomers). The acrylic is a “drop in” for polyester resin, but lactide requires elevated temperature processes. At end of life, acrylic is lower in the recycling hierarchy.
Original languageEnglish
Publication statusPublished - 6 Apr 2022
Event5th International Symposium on Automated Composites Manufacturing (ACM-5) -
Duration: 6 Apr 2022 → …

Conference

Conference5th International Symposium on Automated Composites Manufacturing (ACM-5)
Period6/04/22 → …

Keywords

  • in situ polymerisation (ISP)
  • Large structures
  • Marine environment
  • Monomer Infusion under Flexible Tooling (MIFT)
  • Thermoplastic matrix

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