Reliable curing
of the resin and adhesive layer is essential to ensure the integrity and
sound mechanical performance of bonded composite repairs. Conventional
heating blankets have hitherto been used to conduct heat to the repair
area by using one or two spots for temperature measurement. Although
this method provides good results for small repairs, large temperature
discrepancies — cold and hot spots — are frequently observed when larger
areas need to be heated.
With EU funding of the project 'Flexible conductive composite repair
heaters' (CONDUCTOR), scientists have been developing a new heating
solution dubbed conductive skin heating (CSH) to minimise inhomogeneous
temperature distribution. This method involves lower currents and
voltages compared to heating blankets. Consequently, the CSH mats should
be much cheaper, and electrical danger for the operators and any
peripheral electronic devices will be significantly reduced. In
addition, as this method allows heating of very thin foils, the CSH mats
should be very flexible and easy to adapt to complex 3D geometries.
Scientists defined the main design parameters and the repair process
constraints for preparing the specifications and overall design of the
new CSH system. In their bid to select a suitable material for CSH that
meets the requirements, they proceeded with a metal-coated material and
an expanded metal foil.
Use of available finite element codes helped simulate the thermal
transfer mechanism in composite repairs. A representative repair case
was modelled to calculate the heat losses through conduction and
convection, which are the main causes for steep temperature gradients.
This numerical study would help with the choice of the proper CSH
material.
Scientists also started preparing the optimised CSH prototype
hardware including all elements. This would be used to optimise the CSH
parameters and fine tune accordingly the heating control algorithm.
CONDUCTOR is in line with the Clean Sky objectives regarding green
repair solutions that further guarantee safe and 'ecolonomic' long-term
use of an aircraft structure. The proposed repair process should improve
reliability and performance, while also minimising the time an aircraft
needs to spend on the ground for repair.