CA1290234C - Composite panel structure - Google Patents
Composite panel structureInfo
- Publication number
- CA1290234C CA1290234C CA000590729A CA590729A CA1290234C CA 1290234 C CA1290234 C CA 1290234C CA 000590729 A CA000590729 A CA 000590729A CA 590729 A CA590729 A CA 590729A CA 1290234 C CA1290234 C CA 1290234C
- Authority
- CA
- Canada
- Prior art keywords
- layer
- resin
- panel
- cells
- polyester resin
- Prior art date
- Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
- Expired - Lifetime
Links
- 239000002131 composite material Substances 0.000 title claims abstract description 29
- 239000011152 fibreglass Substances 0.000 claims abstract description 32
- -1 polypropylene Polymers 0.000 claims abstract description 20
- 229920003023 plastic Polymers 0.000 claims abstract description 14
- 239000004033 plastic Substances 0.000 claims abstract description 14
- 239000004743 Polypropylene Substances 0.000 claims abstract description 11
- 229920001155 polypropylene Polymers 0.000 claims abstract description 11
- 238000004519 manufacturing process Methods 0.000 claims abstract description 9
- 238000000034 method Methods 0.000 claims abstract description 9
- 239000010410 layer Substances 0.000 claims description 81
- 229920005989 resin Polymers 0.000 claims description 54
- 239000011347 resin Substances 0.000 claims description 54
- 239000007788 liquid Substances 0.000 claims description 44
- 229920001225 polyester resin Polymers 0.000 claims description 31
- 239000004645 polyester resin Substances 0.000 claims description 31
- 239000004744 fabric Substances 0.000 claims description 14
- 239000002023 wood Substances 0.000 claims description 8
- 229920006337 unsaturated polyester resin Polymers 0.000 claims description 7
- 239000012792 core layer Substances 0.000 claims description 6
- 230000000149 penetrating effect Effects 0.000 claims description 6
- 230000035515 penetration Effects 0.000 claims description 6
- 239000004698 Polyethylene Substances 0.000 claims description 4
- 230000001464 adherent effect Effects 0.000 claims description 4
- 229920000573 polyethylene Polymers 0.000 claims description 4
- 229920000915 polyvinyl chloride Polymers 0.000 claims description 4
- 239000004800 polyvinyl chloride Substances 0.000 claims description 4
- 229920006248 expandable polystyrene Polymers 0.000 claims description 2
- 229920002635 polyurethane Polymers 0.000 claims description 2
- 239000004814 polyurethane Substances 0.000 claims description 2
- 229920006305 unsaturated polyester Polymers 0.000 claims description 2
- 229920000728 polyester Polymers 0.000 abstract description 8
- 210000004027 cell Anatomy 0.000 description 33
- 238000009413 insulation Methods 0.000 description 7
- 239000011120 plywood Substances 0.000 description 6
- 230000004048 modification Effects 0.000 description 4
- 238000012986 modification Methods 0.000 description 4
- 239000007787 solid Substances 0.000 description 4
- 239000007921 spray Substances 0.000 description 4
- 229920001187 thermosetting polymer Polymers 0.000 description 4
- 239000003054 catalyst Substances 0.000 description 3
- 239000000463 material Substances 0.000 description 3
- 239000002184 metal Substances 0.000 description 3
- 229910052751 metal Inorganic materials 0.000 description 3
- PPBRXRYQALVLMV-UHFFFAOYSA-N Styrene Chemical compound C=CC1=CC=CC=C1 PPBRXRYQALVLMV-UHFFFAOYSA-N 0.000 description 2
- 210000002421 cell wall Anatomy 0.000 description 2
- 239000000945 filler Substances 0.000 description 2
- 238000005086 pumping Methods 0.000 description 2
- 238000005507 spraying Methods 0.000 description 2
- 229920005830 Polyurethane Foam Polymers 0.000 description 1
- 235000004443 Ricinus communis Nutrition 0.000 description 1
- 239000002253 acid Substances 0.000 description 1
- 150000007513 acids Chemical class 0.000 description 1
- 239000000853 adhesive Substances 0.000 description 1
- 230000001070 adhesive effect Effects 0.000 description 1
- 150000001298 alcohols Chemical class 0.000 description 1
- 239000011230 binding agent Substances 0.000 description 1
- 230000015572 biosynthetic process Effects 0.000 description 1
- 230000001680 brushing effect Effects 0.000 description 1
- 238000009435 building construction Methods 0.000 description 1
- 238000003490 calendering Methods 0.000 description 1
- 230000001413 cellular effect Effects 0.000 description 1
- 239000003795 chemical substances by application Substances 0.000 description 1
- 239000003086 colorant Substances 0.000 description 1
- 239000011162 core material Substances 0.000 description 1
- 230000003670 easy-to-clean Effects 0.000 description 1
- 238000007688 edging Methods 0.000 description 1
- 238000005516 engineering process Methods 0.000 description 1
- 239000000835 fiber Substances 0.000 description 1
- 239000011094 fiberboard Substances 0.000 description 1
- 239000011810 insulating material Substances 0.000 description 1
- QSHDDOUJBYECFT-UHFFFAOYSA-N mercury Chemical compound [Hg] QSHDDOUJBYECFT-UHFFFAOYSA-N 0.000 description 1
- 229910052753 mercury Inorganic materials 0.000 description 1
- 239000000178 monomer Substances 0.000 description 1
- 239000003973 paint Substances 0.000 description 1
- 239000000123 paper Substances 0.000 description 1
- 239000000049 pigment Substances 0.000 description 1
- 239000002984 plastic foam Substances 0.000 description 1
- 229920006327 polystyrene foam Polymers 0.000 description 1
- 239000011496 polyurethane foam Substances 0.000 description 1
- 239000012779 reinforcing material Substances 0.000 description 1
- 238000007761 roller coating Methods 0.000 description 1
- 238000000926 separation method Methods 0.000 description 1
Classifications
-
- B—PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
- B32—LAYERED PRODUCTS
- B32B—LAYERED PRODUCTS, i.e. PRODUCTS BUILT-UP OF STRATA OF FLAT OR NON-FLAT, e.g. CELLULAR OR HONEYCOMB, FORM
- B32B3/00—Layered products comprising a layer with external or internal discontinuities or unevennesses, or a layer of non-planar shape; Layered products comprising a layer having particular features of form
- B32B3/10—Layered products comprising a layer with external or internal discontinuities or unevennesses, or a layer of non-planar shape; Layered products comprising a layer having particular features of form characterised by a discontinuous layer, i.e. formed of separate pieces of material
- B32B3/12—Layered products comprising a layer with external or internal discontinuities or unevennesses, or a layer of non-planar shape; Layered products comprising a layer having particular features of form characterised by a discontinuous layer, i.e. formed of separate pieces of material characterised by a layer of regularly- arranged cells, e.g. a honeycomb structure
-
- B—PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
- B29—WORKING OF PLASTICS; WORKING OF SUBSTANCES IN A PLASTIC STATE IN GENERAL
- B29D—PRODUCING PARTICULAR ARTICLES FROM PLASTICS OR FROM SUBSTANCES IN A PLASTIC STATE
- B29D24/00—Producing articles with hollow walls
- B29D24/002—Producing articles with hollow walls formed with structures, e.g. cores placed between two plates or sheets, e.g. partially filled
- B29D24/005—Producing articles with hollow walls formed with structures, e.g. cores placed between two plates or sheets, e.g. partially filled the structure having joined ribs, e.g. honeycomb
-
- B—PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
- B32—LAYERED PRODUCTS
- B32B—LAYERED PRODUCTS, i.e. PRODUCTS BUILT-UP OF STRATA OF FLAT OR NON-FLAT, e.g. CELLULAR OR HONEYCOMB, FORM
- B32B37/00—Methods or apparatus for laminating, e.g. by curing or by ultrasonic bonding
- B32B37/10—Methods or apparatus for laminating, e.g. by curing or by ultrasonic bonding characterised by the pressing technique, e.g. using action of vacuum or fluid pressure
- B32B37/1018—Methods or apparatus for laminating, e.g. by curing or by ultrasonic bonding characterised by the pressing technique, e.g. using action of vacuum or fluid pressure using only vacuum
-
- B—PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
- B29—WORKING OF PLASTICS; WORKING OF SUBSTANCES IN A PLASTIC STATE IN GENERAL
- B29C—SHAPING OR JOINING OF PLASTICS; SHAPING OF MATERIAL IN A PLASTIC STATE, NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR; AFTER-TREATMENT OF THE SHAPED PRODUCTS, e.g. REPAIRING
- B29C70/00—Shaping composites, i.e. plastics material comprising reinforcements, fillers or preformed parts, e.g. inserts
- B29C70/04—Shaping composites, i.e. plastics material comprising reinforcements, fillers or preformed parts, e.g. inserts comprising reinforcements only, e.g. self-reinforcing plastics
-
- B—PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
- B29—WORKING OF PLASTICS; WORKING OF SUBSTANCES IN A PLASTIC STATE IN GENERAL
- B29K—INDEXING SCHEME ASSOCIATED WITH SUBCLASSES B29B, B29C OR B29D, RELATING TO MOULDING MATERIALS OR TO MATERIALS FOR MOULDS, REINFORCEMENTS, FILLERS OR PREFORMED PARTS, e.g. INSERTS
- B29K2023/00—Use of polyalkenes or derivatives thereof as moulding material
- B29K2023/10—Polymers of propylene
- B29K2023/12—PP, i.e. polypropylene
-
- B—PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
- B29—WORKING OF PLASTICS; WORKING OF SUBSTANCES IN A PLASTIC STATE IN GENERAL
- B29K—INDEXING SCHEME ASSOCIATED WITH SUBCLASSES B29B, B29C OR B29D, RELATING TO MOULDING MATERIALS OR TO MATERIALS FOR MOULDS, REINFORCEMENTS, FILLERS OR PREFORMED PARTS, e.g. INSERTS
- B29K2067/00—Use of polyesters or derivatives thereof, as moulding material
-
- B—PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
- B32—LAYERED PRODUCTS
- B32B—LAYERED PRODUCTS, i.e. PRODUCTS BUILT-UP OF STRATA OF FLAT OR NON-FLAT, e.g. CELLULAR OR HONEYCOMB, FORM
- B32B2305/00—Condition, form or state of the layers or laminate
- B32B2305/02—Cellular or porous
- B32B2305/024—Honeycomb
Landscapes
- Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
- Fluid Mechanics (AREA)
- Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
- Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
- Laminated Bodies (AREA)
Abstract
ABSTRACT
The invention includes a composite panel and a method for manufacturing it. The panel has a smooth polyester plastic face, a first fiberglass reinforced polyester layer adjacent to the smooth face, a honeycomb structure core of polypropylene plastic with one face adhered to the first polyester layer, and a second fiberglass reinforced polyester layer adhered to the second face of the core. The panel is manufactured by assembling the components in a series of steps and curing the polyester layers in sequence on a flat horizontal mold.
The invention includes a composite panel and a method for manufacturing it. The panel has a smooth polyester plastic face, a first fiberglass reinforced polyester layer adjacent to the smooth face, a honeycomb structure core of polypropylene plastic with one face adhered to the first polyester layer, and a second fiberglass reinforced polyester layer adhered to the second face of the core. The panel is manufactured by assembling the components in a series of steps and curing the polyester layers in sequence on a flat horizontal mold.
Description
~.Z90~34 COMPOSITE PANEL STRUCTURE
This invention relates to a composite panel structure and to a method of manufacturlng it. More particularly the lnvention relates to a lightwelght composite panel structure having fiberglass reinforced resin faces and a lightweight honeycomb core having thin honeycomb cell walls of polypropylene resin.
The invention includes also a modification of the basic panel which includes a border of wood around the perimeter of the honeycomb core, and a modification which includes foamed plastic insulation in the honeycomb cells.
10Numerous earlier patents have disclosed composite panel structures having a honeycomb core. However none of these have disclosed nor suggested the manufacture of panels having the structure, strength, and possible size of the panels of the present invention. Thus U.S. patent 2,833,004 of D.R. Johnson et 15al issued 6 May, 1958 discloses a composite type flush door structure having a wooden frame around its perimeter, a honeycomb core, and plywood, fiber board, or hard board facings covering the frame and honeycomb faces. Such doors have dimensions less than two or three meters. For decorative purposes the facings and edges of the frame are covered with a thin skin or sheet of plastic or metal cemented to the outside of the facings.
Similarly ~.S. patent 2,839,442 of R.W. Whitaker issued 17 June, 1958 discloses a lightweight structural panel having a perimeter strip of edging around the perimeter of an open cell core of corrugated or honeycombed paper. The open cells of the honeycomb core are sealed by a thin continuous film of thermosetting resin paS~ 1 ~`
1~90;~34 which is applied to the two faces of the core from a thln metal sheet and cured in a mold. Subsequently a laminate of fibrous reinforcing material and resin is applied to the faces and edges of the frame and core in a die or mold which is electrically heated to cure the resin with the laminated panel being pressed in the die during curing. The need for a die or mold that entirely enclosed the panel seriously restricts the size of panel that can be manufactured economically. Likewise U.S. patent 3,630,813 of J.W. Allen issued 28 December, 1971 discloses a composite panel having a rigid metal cellular (honeycomb) core with impact-absorbing filler material of cured, mixed, cellulosic fiber and thermosetting resin binder filling the cells of the core. In a modification of that invention, the core and excess filler material have a layer of fiberglass cloth bonded to the upper and lower faces of the panel by the thermosetting resin when the panel is being formed in a hot press mold to cure the thermosetting resin. Again the need for a mold that entirely encloses the panel seriously restricts the size of economically manufactured panels.
2G None of the foregoing or other disclosures in the art of manufacturing composite panels is known to have suggested panel structures having widths or lengths greater than normal building panels, which most commonly are of a size of four by eight feet (1.22 by 2.44 meters). The panels of the present invention specifically include panel sizes up to twelve feet by fifty feet (3.66 meters by 15.24 meters) or greater, which can be readily manufactured with simple equipment. Panels of such dimensions are ideal as walls for trucks and truck trailers, in which the entire sidewall of a truck or trailer can be made from a single Fi~B 2 lX90;~34 panel.
The invention thus consists in a composite panel having:
(1) a first face comprising a first layer of cured polyester resin bonded to (2) a second layer of cured polyester resin having embedded thereln a fabric of woven roving fiberglass bonded by sald second layer of cured resin to one side of (3) a polypropylene core layer of thin wall, open cell, honeycomb structure, ln turn bonded to (4) a second face comprising a third layer of cured polyester resin having embedded therein a fabric of woven roving fiberglass, said third layer of cured polyester resin bonding said second face to the second side of said polypropylene core layer, and (5) means to prevent resin from said second and third layers from penetrating through the cells of the honeycomb structure core.
The invention further consists in the method of manufacturing the composite panel described immediately above, said method comprising:
(1) forming a thin continuous first layer of curable liquid unsaturated polyester gel coat resin on the top of a flat smooth, substantially level mold;
(2) curing said first layer to a hard outer first facing for the composite panel;
(3) forming a second continuous and thicker layer of a second curable liquid unsaturated polyester resin on top of the total area of said first layer;
1~90~34 (4) embedding a first continuous fabric layer of woven roving fiberglass in said second layer of liquld resin to cover the area of said first facing;
(5) laying abutting sections of a thin wall, open cell, polypropylene honeycomb structure in said second layer of liquid resin on top of said first fabric layer to cover the area thereof, said sections of honeycomb structure having means on each open cell face to prevent penetration of said second liquid resin through said open cells;
This invention relates to a composite panel structure and to a method of manufacturlng it. More particularly the lnvention relates to a lightwelght composite panel structure having fiberglass reinforced resin faces and a lightweight honeycomb core having thin honeycomb cell walls of polypropylene resin.
The invention includes also a modification of the basic panel which includes a border of wood around the perimeter of the honeycomb core, and a modification which includes foamed plastic insulation in the honeycomb cells.
10Numerous earlier patents have disclosed composite panel structures having a honeycomb core. However none of these have disclosed nor suggested the manufacture of panels having the structure, strength, and possible size of the panels of the present invention. Thus U.S. patent 2,833,004 of D.R. Johnson et 15al issued 6 May, 1958 discloses a composite type flush door structure having a wooden frame around its perimeter, a honeycomb core, and plywood, fiber board, or hard board facings covering the frame and honeycomb faces. Such doors have dimensions less than two or three meters. For decorative purposes the facings and edges of the frame are covered with a thin skin or sheet of plastic or metal cemented to the outside of the facings.
Similarly ~.S. patent 2,839,442 of R.W. Whitaker issued 17 June, 1958 discloses a lightweight structural panel having a perimeter strip of edging around the perimeter of an open cell core of corrugated or honeycombed paper. The open cells of the honeycomb core are sealed by a thin continuous film of thermosetting resin paS~ 1 ~`
1~90;~34 which is applied to the two faces of the core from a thln metal sheet and cured in a mold. Subsequently a laminate of fibrous reinforcing material and resin is applied to the faces and edges of the frame and core in a die or mold which is electrically heated to cure the resin with the laminated panel being pressed in the die during curing. The need for a die or mold that entirely enclosed the panel seriously restricts the size of panel that can be manufactured economically. Likewise U.S. patent 3,630,813 of J.W. Allen issued 28 December, 1971 discloses a composite panel having a rigid metal cellular (honeycomb) core with impact-absorbing filler material of cured, mixed, cellulosic fiber and thermosetting resin binder filling the cells of the core. In a modification of that invention, the core and excess filler material have a layer of fiberglass cloth bonded to the upper and lower faces of the panel by the thermosetting resin when the panel is being formed in a hot press mold to cure the thermosetting resin. Again the need for a mold that entirely encloses the panel seriously restricts the size of economically manufactured panels.
2G None of the foregoing or other disclosures in the art of manufacturing composite panels is known to have suggested panel structures having widths or lengths greater than normal building panels, which most commonly are of a size of four by eight feet (1.22 by 2.44 meters). The panels of the present invention specifically include panel sizes up to twelve feet by fifty feet (3.66 meters by 15.24 meters) or greater, which can be readily manufactured with simple equipment. Panels of such dimensions are ideal as walls for trucks and truck trailers, in which the entire sidewall of a truck or trailer can be made from a single Fi~B 2 lX90;~34 panel.
The invention thus consists in a composite panel having:
(1) a first face comprising a first layer of cured polyester resin bonded to (2) a second layer of cured polyester resin having embedded thereln a fabric of woven roving fiberglass bonded by sald second layer of cured resin to one side of (3) a polypropylene core layer of thin wall, open cell, honeycomb structure, ln turn bonded to (4) a second face comprising a third layer of cured polyester resin having embedded therein a fabric of woven roving fiberglass, said third layer of cured polyester resin bonding said second face to the second side of said polypropylene core layer, and (5) means to prevent resin from said second and third layers from penetrating through the cells of the honeycomb structure core.
The invention further consists in the method of manufacturing the composite panel described immediately above, said method comprising:
(1) forming a thin continuous first layer of curable liquid unsaturated polyester gel coat resin on the top of a flat smooth, substantially level mold;
(2) curing said first layer to a hard outer first facing for the composite panel;
(3) forming a second continuous and thicker layer of a second curable liquid unsaturated polyester resin on top of the total area of said first layer;
1~90~34 (4) embedding a first continuous fabric layer of woven roving fiberglass in said second layer of liquld resin to cover the area of said first facing;
(5) laying abutting sections of a thin wall, open cell, polypropylene honeycomb structure in said second layer of liquid resin on top of said first fabric layer to cover the area thereof, said sections of honeycomb structure having means on each open cell face to prevent penetration of said second liquid resin through said open cells;
(6) covering the mold with a flexible air impervious resin film of polyethylene or polyvinyl chloride non-adherent to cured polyester resin to form an airtight cover over the mold;
(7) evacuating air from the mold under the said cover while said second layer of polyester resin is cured;
(8) removing the said cover from said mold;
(9) forming a third continuous layer of said second curable liquid unsaturated polyester resin on top of the upper face of the honeycomb structures;
(10) embedding a second continuous fabric layer of woven roving fiberglass in said third layer of liquid resin to cover the area thereof;
(11) curing said third layer of resin, then removing the composite panel from the mold.
The curable liquid unsaturated polyester resins referred to herein are those resin solutions commonly used in the manufacture of fiberglass reinforced plastic materials, and generally comprise polyesters of unsaturated dibasic acids and dihydric alcohols in solution in a polymerizable liquid monomer, usually styrene. They are readily available from a number of P~3e 4 ~.2~30~34 manufacturers of such resins.
The preferred means to prevent penetratlon of the second and third layers of curable liquid polyester resin through the cells of the honeycomb structure, during manufacture of a composite panel as descrlbed above, is to have a thin mat of non-woven, randomly oriented fiberglass lightly adhered to the open ends of the cells on each face of the hGneycomb structures. Such a thin mat of non-woven fiberglass, for example 0.1 to 0.2 inches (2 to 5 mm) in thickness, permits penetration of liquid polyester resin layers therethrough to the edges of the open cells of the honeycomb structures, so that the honeycomb structures become firmly adhered to the resin layers when the latter are cured, but impedes the flow of liquid resin sufficiently to prevent it from filling the open cells. The open cells thus are kept substantially free of cured resin, thereby minimizing the amount of polyester resin required to manufacture the panel and also maximizing the light weight advantage of an open cell honeycomb structure. Another means to prevent penetration of the second and third layers of curable liquid polyester resin through the cells of the honeycomb structure during manufacture of a composite panel as described above is to have the honeycomb cells filled with low density foamed plastic before the honeycomb structures contact the liquid polyester resin layers. The light weight, low density, foamed plastic, for example polyurethane foam or polystyrene foam, increases the weight of the honeycomb structures only slightly, and does significantly increase the thermal insulating properties of the completed panel as well as preventing liquid polyester resin from penetrating through the ~ge S
1~90;~34 cells of the honeycomb structure.
A better understandlng of the invention and its scope may be ascertained from the following description thereof and the accompanying drawings in which:
Figure 1 lllustrates the sequence of the various layers which are assembled to form the panel of one embodiment of the invention;
Figure 2 illustrates a completed panel, partly cut away to show an interior layer;
Figure 3 illustrates typical apparatus suitable for assembling a panel, with some of a panels components being assembled thereon;
Figure 4 illustrates another assembled panel, also partly cut away, showing a wooden perimeter surrounding the honeycomb core; and, Figure 5 illustrates a small section of a panel, partly cut away, showing honeycomb cells filled with lightweight foamed plastic.
Turning now to the details of the various figures of the drawings, .in Figure 1 illustrating the elements to be assembled into a panel, 1 represents an outer facing layer of cured, unsaturated, polyester gel coat resin, which is formed on the smooth face of a flat level mold as will subsequently be described with reference to Figure 3. This facing layer is usually referred to in the fiberglass reinforced plastics industry as a gel coat. Adjacent the facing layer or gel coat is a fabric layer of woven roving fiberglass, 2, which, during ass~mbly of the panel, is embedded in a liquid layer of uncured unsaturated polyester resin formed on top of the outer facing layer.
~6 12902;~4 Elements 3 and 5 are lower and upper thin mats of non-woven, randomly oriented fiberglass, each of which is lightly adhered to a respective face of a thin wall, open cell, polypropylene ~
honeycomb core, 4, prior to assembly of a panel. On top of the upper thin mat of non-woven fiberglass 5, is another fabric layer of woven roving fiberglass 6, which, during assembly of the panel, is embedded in another liquid layer of uncured unsaturated polyester resin formed on top of the upper thin mat, 5, of randomly oriented fiberglass. Optionally, around the four sides of the honeycomb core there may be edge strips of wood having substantially the same thickness as the honeycomb core. Such strips conveniently may be made of plywood. Only two such strips, 7 and 8, are shown in Figure 1 for clarity of illustration, but normally strips around all four edges of the core would be used if any are used. The wooden strips serve primarily as a convenient and stronger base or foundation to hold nails, screws, bolts, or other fasteners used to anchor or fasten the panel to other adjoining elements to which the panel is to be attached.
Figure 2 illustrates an isometric view of an assembled panel, having the essential elements of Figure 1.
Figure 3 illustrates a mobile mold, indicated generally as 9, most conveniently mounted on a frame, 11, having castor wheels, 10, to facilitate movement of the mold as large panels are being assembled. The critical part of the mold is the large, flat, smooth, horizontal surface, 12. Preferrably, the horizontal mold surface is treated or coated with a release agent, for example a wax, to facilitate separation of the mold ~e7 1290~34 from the panel when the latter ls complete. The mold surface should be clean and free of cracks and flaws to obtain panels with a blemish-free face. To assemble a panel of the invention with apparatus as illustrated in Figure 3, the following method is preferred.
First, a unlform thickness liquid gel coat polyester resin, generally of 10 to 20 mil (0.25 to 0.51 mm) thickness, preferrably 15 mil (0.37 mm) thickness, having area dimensions slightly greater than the desired length and width of the desired outer facing layer 1 is formed on the mold. This can be coated on the mold in any convenient way, for example by brushing, roller coating, doctoring, or calendering, but most conveniently is done by spraying gel coat resin solution on the horizontal surface from above as a mobile mold is moved continuously and uniformly through a spray booth under a vertical spray. When the gel coat has been formed on the mold, it is allowed to cure. The formation of a gel coat on a mold in this manner is a procedure well known in the art of preparing fiberglass reinforced plast;c articles.
When the gel coat has cured, which, depending on the ambient temperature and curing catalyst employed in the gel coat, generally requires between 10 and 30 minutes, usually about 15 minutes, the mobile mold again is moved continuously and uniformly through the spray booth and a second curable liquid polyester resin layer is applied over the cured surface of the gel coat. This second liquid resin layer is applied at a uniform thickness between substantially 20 and 50 mil (0.51 and 1.27 mm), preferrably substantially 30 mil (0.76 mm). As soon as this resin layer has been applied, a layer of woven roving fiberglass ~8 1.290~34 is laid in the liquid resin to cover the entire llquid layer, then the fiberglass is gently worked to ensure that the woven roving is entirely wetted by the liquid layer. Immediately after the woven roving is thoroughly wetted by the resin, sections of thin wall, open cell, polypropylene honeycomb, each section having a thin mat of non-woven, randomly oriented fiberglass lightly adhered to each open cell face, are laid in the liquid resin on top of the woven roving. The polypropylene honeycomb sections are arranged to cover the entire area of the woven roving, unless it is desired to utilize the option of having wooden edges around the core of the finished panel. If this option is desired, a perimeter around the honeycomb sections is formed with strips of wood, plywood, or other desired wood composite so that the honeycomb and wooden perimeter together cover the entire area of the woven roving to form the core of the finished panel.
As soon as the honeycomb sections, and the wooden perimeter strips if they are to be included, are in place on the second liquid resin layer, the mold and the layers assembled thereon are covered with a sheet of flexible, air impervious, smooth resin film of polyethylene or polyvinyl chloride which is non-adherent, or at most only weakly adherent, to cured polyester resin. Such a sheet is shown in dotted lines as 13 in Figure 3. Once it is draped over the mold it is fastened thereto to form an airtight seal over the assembled layers and air is evacuated from under the sheet with a vacuum pump, 14. Pumping of the vacuum is maintained while the second liquid resin layer cures. Because of the vacuum under the sheet, atmospheric pressure above the sheet ~9 1290~34 presses the latter down and forces the assembled layers into intimate contact with the liquid resin while the latter cures which, depending on the ambient temperature and the curing catalyst employed in the second polyester resin layer, also generally requires between 10 and 30 minutes, usually about 20 minutes. Under the vacuum, the liquid polyester resln penetrates the thin mat of randomly oriented fibreglass and wets the bottom edges of the polypropylene honeycomb cells to adhere firmly and securely to the cells when the resin cures.
Once the second liquid resin layer has cured, the vacuum is disconnected and the cover sheet is stripped from the mold.
Because the cured polyester resin does not adhere firmly to polyethylene or polyvinyl chloride, the cover sheet is easily stripped manually from the assembled layers and any exposed polyester resin that may have been squeezed from between them into contact wlth the cover sheet. It is surprlsing and completely unexpected that the polyester resin adheres so firmly to the cell walls of the polypropylene honeycomb, when it exhibits little or no adhesion to polyéthylene.
Once the cover sheet has been removed, the top thin mat of non-woven randomly oriented fiberglass on top of the honeycomb sections, and the top face of the wooden perimeter strips if these are present, are covered with a third layer of curable liquid polyester resin, most conveniently by again moving the mobile mold continuously and uniformly through the spray booth while spraying the liquid resin to form a third liquid resin layer of uniform thickness between substantially 20 and 50 mil (0.51 and 1.27 mm), preferrably substantially 30 mil (0.76 mm) thickness. As or when this layer is formed, another layer of ~10 i~90~34 woven roving fiberglass cloth is embedded therein and the liquid resin allowed to cure at ambient temperature. Again depending on the ambient temperature and the curing catalyst employed in the third polyester resin layer, the curing time required is generally between 10 and 30 minutes, usually about twenty minutes. When this cure is complete, the completed panel is removed from the mold and the edges can be trimmed with an appropriate cutter to bring the completed panel size down to exact desired dimensions.
The thickness of the polypropylene honeycomb core can vary in accordance with the desired thickness of the finished panel, and generally is in the range of 0.5 to 3.0 inches (13 to 76 mm).
The area of individual cells in the honeycomb also can vary, and generally the cells are four sided with sides of between 200 and 400 mil (5.1 and 10.2 mm) long. However, five or six sided honeycomb cells also can be used. When a wooden perimeter around the honeycomb core is desired, it preferrably is of substantially the same thickness as the thickness of the core, although it can be slightly thicker or slightly thinner. The width of the perimeter strips, when used, also may vary, and conveniently can range between for example one and eight inches (2.5 - 20 cm), frequently depending on the particular requirement for fastening the edge of the panel to an adjoining structure; most conveniently strips between two and five inches (5 and 12.5 cm) are used.
When air is being pumped out from under the cover sheet during curing of the second liquid polyester resin layer, it is important that a vacuum of substantially at least substantially pz~e 11 ~.290~34 20 inches (51 cm) of mercury be arranged, or that a pumping capacity of substantially at least 12.5 cubic feet per min. (1.2 cubic meters per minute) be provided, so that vapors from the curing resin will be removed and the cover will be pulled tightly against the assembled layers and force them into firm contact with the curing resin to form solid adhesive bonds, both vertlcally and horizontally.
Figure 4 is a top view of an assembled panel partly cut away, having wooden side and end edge strips 7 and 8 respectively. Figure 5 shows a small section of a panel with no fiberglass mat on the faces of the honeycomb core, 4, but having light weight foamed plastic insulation, 15, in the open ended cells of the honeycomb, as the means which prevented liquid polyester resin from penetrating through the honeycomb cells during assembly of the panel; the insulation also, of course, improves the thermal insulating capacity of the panel without adding significantly to the weight of the panel. The density of the foamed insulation naturally is greater than that of air which it replaces in the cells of the honeycomb, and preferrably is in the range of 1.7 to 2.1 lb/cuft (0.0272 to 0.0336 g/cc), but can be any value provided by the usual commercial foamed plastic insulating materials, for example foamed polyurethane and foamed polystyrene.
The size of composite panels that are readily manufactured by the method as just described can readily vary in width up to twelve feet (3.66 meters) and more, and in length up to 50 feet (15.24 meters) and more, being limited only by the size of the mold and other equipment required to assembly the composite panels. A common length of semi-trailers in North America is 48 p~e 12 1290~34 to 50 feet, and semi-trailer side walls nine to ten feet hlgh and 48 to 50 feet long are readily made as a single composite panel of the invention by the method described herein. The thickness of the panes also can be varied by use of honeycomb cores of appropriate thickness, with thicker panels and with plastic foam insulation filling the honeycomb core cells preferred when greater thermal insulation performance of the panels is required.
Roofs as well as walls of semi-trailers and truck bodies also can be made from single composite panels of the invention.
As is well known in the art of fiberglass reinforced plastic technology, the gel coat can be colored readily by incorporating desired pigments and colors into the liquid gel coat layer before it is applied to the mold as the first face of the composite panel of the invention. The gel coat provides this face of the composite panel with a smooth, glossy, opaque, and pleasing appearance that is easy to clean, maintain, and decorate with paint or decals for names, signs, pictures or advertising.
The panels are strong, having fleXural strength as great as or greater than that of comparable panels of equal thickness having a core of solid plywood in place of a polypropylene honeycomb, and the weight of the panels is only about half what it would be having a solid plywood core.
The insulating value of the composite panels with air filled honeycomb cells is far greater than would be obtained with a panel having a solid plywood core, and the insulating value of panels of the invention with foamed plastic insulation in the honeycomb cells is even greater.
Besides truck and trailer walls and roofs, the panels of the pi~B 13 ~90~34 invention also can be used in constructlon of large shipping containers and in building construction.
Numerous modifications can be made in the specific expedients described without departing from the invention, the scope of which is defined in the following claims.
p~ 14
The curable liquid unsaturated polyester resins referred to herein are those resin solutions commonly used in the manufacture of fiberglass reinforced plastic materials, and generally comprise polyesters of unsaturated dibasic acids and dihydric alcohols in solution in a polymerizable liquid monomer, usually styrene. They are readily available from a number of P~3e 4 ~.2~30~34 manufacturers of such resins.
The preferred means to prevent penetratlon of the second and third layers of curable liquid polyester resin through the cells of the honeycomb structure, during manufacture of a composite panel as descrlbed above, is to have a thin mat of non-woven, randomly oriented fiberglass lightly adhered to the open ends of the cells on each face of the hGneycomb structures. Such a thin mat of non-woven fiberglass, for example 0.1 to 0.2 inches (2 to 5 mm) in thickness, permits penetration of liquid polyester resin layers therethrough to the edges of the open cells of the honeycomb structures, so that the honeycomb structures become firmly adhered to the resin layers when the latter are cured, but impedes the flow of liquid resin sufficiently to prevent it from filling the open cells. The open cells thus are kept substantially free of cured resin, thereby minimizing the amount of polyester resin required to manufacture the panel and also maximizing the light weight advantage of an open cell honeycomb structure. Another means to prevent penetration of the second and third layers of curable liquid polyester resin through the cells of the honeycomb structure during manufacture of a composite panel as described above is to have the honeycomb cells filled with low density foamed plastic before the honeycomb structures contact the liquid polyester resin layers. The light weight, low density, foamed plastic, for example polyurethane foam or polystyrene foam, increases the weight of the honeycomb structures only slightly, and does significantly increase the thermal insulating properties of the completed panel as well as preventing liquid polyester resin from penetrating through the ~ge S
1~90;~34 cells of the honeycomb structure.
A better understandlng of the invention and its scope may be ascertained from the following description thereof and the accompanying drawings in which:
Figure 1 lllustrates the sequence of the various layers which are assembled to form the panel of one embodiment of the invention;
Figure 2 illustrates a completed panel, partly cut away to show an interior layer;
Figure 3 illustrates typical apparatus suitable for assembling a panel, with some of a panels components being assembled thereon;
Figure 4 illustrates another assembled panel, also partly cut away, showing a wooden perimeter surrounding the honeycomb core; and, Figure 5 illustrates a small section of a panel, partly cut away, showing honeycomb cells filled with lightweight foamed plastic.
Turning now to the details of the various figures of the drawings, .in Figure 1 illustrating the elements to be assembled into a panel, 1 represents an outer facing layer of cured, unsaturated, polyester gel coat resin, which is formed on the smooth face of a flat level mold as will subsequently be described with reference to Figure 3. This facing layer is usually referred to in the fiberglass reinforced plastics industry as a gel coat. Adjacent the facing layer or gel coat is a fabric layer of woven roving fiberglass, 2, which, during ass~mbly of the panel, is embedded in a liquid layer of uncured unsaturated polyester resin formed on top of the outer facing layer.
~6 12902;~4 Elements 3 and 5 are lower and upper thin mats of non-woven, randomly oriented fiberglass, each of which is lightly adhered to a respective face of a thin wall, open cell, polypropylene ~
honeycomb core, 4, prior to assembly of a panel. On top of the upper thin mat of non-woven fiberglass 5, is another fabric layer of woven roving fiberglass 6, which, during assembly of the panel, is embedded in another liquid layer of uncured unsaturated polyester resin formed on top of the upper thin mat, 5, of randomly oriented fiberglass. Optionally, around the four sides of the honeycomb core there may be edge strips of wood having substantially the same thickness as the honeycomb core. Such strips conveniently may be made of plywood. Only two such strips, 7 and 8, are shown in Figure 1 for clarity of illustration, but normally strips around all four edges of the core would be used if any are used. The wooden strips serve primarily as a convenient and stronger base or foundation to hold nails, screws, bolts, or other fasteners used to anchor or fasten the panel to other adjoining elements to which the panel is to be attached.
Figure 2 illustrates an isometric view of an assembled panel, having the essential elements of Figure 1.
Figure 3 illustrates a mobile mold, indicated generally as 9, most conveniently mounted on a frame, 11, having castor wheels, 10, to facilitate movement of the mold as large panels are being assembled. The critical part of the mold is the large, flat, smooth, horizontal surface, 12. Preferrably, the horizontal mold surface is treated or coated with a release agent, for example a wax, to facilitate separation of the mold ~e7 1290~34 from the panel when the latter ls complete. The mold surface should be clean and free of cracks and flaws to obtain panels with a blemish-free face. To assemble a panel of the invention with apparatus as illustrated in Figure 3, the following method is preferred.
First, a unlform thickness liquid gel coat polyester resin, generally of 10 to 20 mil (0.25 to 0.51 mm) thickness, preferrably 15 mil (0.37 mm) thickness, having area dimensions slightly greater than the desired length and width of the desired outer facing layer 1 is formed on the mold. This can be coated on the mold in any convenient way, for example by brushing, roller coating, doctoring, or calendering, but most conveniently is done by spraying gel coat resin solution on the horizontal surface from above as a mobile mold is moved continuously and uniformly through a spray booth under a vertical spray. When the gel coat has been formed on the mold, it is allowed to cure. The formation of a gel coat on a mold in this manner is a procedure well known in the art of preparing fiberglass reinforced plast;c articles.
When the gel coat has cured, which, depending on the ambient temperature and curing catalyst employed in the gel coat, generally requires between 10 and 30 minutes, usually about 15 minutes, the mobile mold again is moved continuously and uniformly through the spray booth and a second curable liquid polyester resin layer is applied over the cured surface of the gel coat. This second liquid resin layer is applied at a uniform thickness between substantially 20 and 50 mil (0.51 and 1.27 mm), preferrably substantially 30 mil (0.76 mm). As soon as this resin layer has been applied, a layer of woven roving fiberglass ~8 1.290~34 is laid in the liquid resin to cover the entire llquid layer, then the fiberglass is gently worked to ensure that the woven roving is entirely wetted by the liquid layer. Immediately after the woven roving is thoroughly wetted by the resin, sections of thin wall, open cell, polypropylene honeycomb, each section having a thin mat of non-woven, randomly oriented fiberglass lightly adhered to each open cell face, are laid in the liquid resin on top of the woven roving. The polypropylene honeycomb sections are arranged to cover the entire area of the woven roving, unless it is desired to utilize the option of having wooden edges around the core of the finished panel. If this option is desired, a perimeter around the honeycomb sections is formed with strips of wood, plywood, or other desired wood composite so that the honeycomb and wooden perimeter together cover the entire area of the woven roving to form the core of the finished panel.
As soon as the honeycomb sections, and the wooden perimeter strips if they are to be included, are in place on the second liquid resin layer, the mold and the layers assembled thereon are covered with a sheet of flexible, air impervious, smooth resin film of polyethylene or polyvinyl chloride which is non-adherent, or at most only weakly adherent, to cured polyester resin. Such a sheet is shown in dotted lines as 13 in Figure 3. Once it is draped over the mold it is fastened thereto to form an airtight seal over the assembled layers and air is evacuated from under the sheet with a vacuum pump, 14. Pumping of the vacuum is maintained while the second liquid resin layer cures. Because of the vacuum under the sheet, atmospheric pressure above the sheet ~9 1290~34 presses the latter down and forces the assembled layers into intimate contact with the liquid resin while the latter cures which, depending on the ambient temperature and the curing catalyst employed in the second polyester resin layer, also generally requires between 10 and 30 minutes, usually about 20 minutes. Under the vacuum, the liquid polyester resln penetrates the thin mat of randomly oriented fibreglass and wets the bottom edges of the polypropylene honeycomb cells to adhere firmly and securely to the cells when the resin cures.
Once the second liquid resin layer has cured, the vacuum is disconnected and the cover sheet is stripped from the mold.
Because the cured polyester resin does not adhere firmly to polyethylene or polyvinyl chloride, the cover sheet is easily stripped manually from the assembled layers and any exposed polyester resin that may have been squeezed from between them into contact wlth the cover sheet. It is surprlsing and completely unexpected that the polyester resin adheres so firmly to the cell walls of the polypropylene honeycomb, when it exhibits little or no adhesion to polyéthylene.
Once the cover sheet has been removed, the top thin mat of non-woven randomly oriented fiberglass on top of the honeycomb sections, and the top face of the wooden perimeter strips if these are present, are covered with a third layer of curable liquid polyester resin, most conveniently by again moving the mobile mold continuously and uniformly through the spray booth while spraying the liquid resin to form a third liquid resin layer of uniform thickness between substantially 20 and 50 mil (0.51 and 1.27 mm), preferrably substantially 30 mil (0.76 mm) thickness. As or when this layer is formed, another layer of ~10 i~90~34 woven roving fiberglass cloth is embedded therein and the liquid resin allowed to cure at ambient temperature. Again depending on the ambient temperature and the curing catalyst employed in the third polyester resin layer, the curing time required is generally between 10 and 30 minutes, usually about twenty minutes. When this cure is complete, the completed panel is removed from the mold and the edges can be trimmed with an appropriate cutter to bring the completed panel size down to exact desired dimensions.
The thickness of the polypropylene honeycomb core can vary in accordance with the desired thickness of the finished panel, and generally is in the range of 0.5 to 3.0 inches (13 to 76 mm).
The area of individual cells in the honeycomb also can vary, and generally the cells are four sided with sides of between 200 and 400 mil (5.1 and 10.2 mm) long. However, five or six sided honeycomb cells also can be used. When a wooden perimeter around the honeycomb core is desired, it preferrably is of substantially the same thickness as the thickness of the core, although it can be slightly thicker or slightly thinner. The width of the perimeter strips, when used, also may vary, and conveniently can range between for example one and eight inches (2.5 - 20 cm), frequently depending on the particular requirement for fastening the edge of the panel to an adjoining structure; most conveniently strips between two and five inches (5 and 12.5 cm) are used.
When air is being pumped out from under the cover sheet during curing of the second liquid polyester resin layer, it is important that a vacuum of substantially at least substantially pz~e 11 ~.290~34 20 inches (51 cm) of mercury be arranged, or that a pumping capacity of substantially at least 12.5 cubic feet per min. (1.2 cubic meters per minute) be provided, so that vapors from the curing resin will be removed and the cover will be pulled tightly against the assembled layers and force them into firm contact with the curing resin to form solid adhesive bonds, both vertlcally and horizontally.
Figure 4 is a top view of an assembled panel partly cut away, having wooden side and end edge strips 7 and 8 respectively. Figure 5 shows a small section of a panel with no fiberglass mat on the faces of the honeycomb core, 4, but having light weight foamed plastic insulation, 15, in the open ended cells of the honeycomb, as the means which prevented liquid polyester resin from penetrating through the honeycomb cells during assembly of the panel; the insulation also, of course, improves the thermal insulating capacity of the panel without adding significantly to the weight of the panel. The density of the foamed insulation naturally is greater than that of air which it replaces in the cells of the honeycomb, and preferrably is in the range of 1.7 to 2.1 lb/cuft (0.0272 to 0.0336 g/cc), but can be any value provided by the usual commercial foamed plastic insulating materials, for example foamed polyurethane and foamed polystyrene.
The size of composite panels that are readily manufactured by the method as just described can readily vary in width up to twelve feet (3.66 meters) and more, and in length up to 50 feet (15.24 meters) and more, being limited only by the size of the mold and other equipment required to assembly the composite panels. A common length of semi-trailers in North America is 48 p~e 12 1290~34 to 50 feet, and semi-trailer side walls nine to ten feet hlgh and 48 to 50 feet long are readily made as a single composite panel of the invention by the method described herein. The thickness of the panes also can be varied by use of honeycomb cores of appropriate thickness, with thicker panels and with plastic foam insulation filling the honeycomb core cells preferred when greater thermal insulation performance of the panels is required.
Roofs as well as walls of semi-trailers and truck bodies also can be made from single composite panels of the invention.
As is well known in the art of fiberglass reinforced plastic technology, the gel coat can be colored readily by incorporating desired pigments and colors into the liquid gel coat layer before it is applied to the mold as the first face of the composite panel of the invention. The gel coat provides this face of the composite panel with a smooth, glossy, opaque, and pleasing appearance that is easy to clean, maintain, and decorate with paint or decals for names, signs, pictures or advertising.
The panels are strong, having fleXural strength as great as or greater than that of comparable panels of equal thickness having a core of solid plywood in place of a polypropylene honeycomb, and the weight of the panels is only about half what it would be having a solid plywood core.
The insulating value of the composite panels with air filled honeycomb cells is far greater than would be obtained with a panel having a solid plywood core, and the insulating value of panels of the invention with foamed plastic insulation in the honeycomb cells is even greater.
Besides truck and trailer walls and roofs, the panels of the pi~B 13 ~90~34 invention also can be used in constructlon of large shipping containers and in building construction.
Numerous modifications can be made in the specific expedients described without departing from the invention, the scope of which is defined in the following claims.
p~ 14
Claims (12)
1. A composite panel having:
(1) a first face comprising a first layer of cured polyester resin bonded to (2) a second layer of cured polyester resin having embedded therein a fabric of woven roving fiberglass bonded by said second layer of cured resin to one side of (3) a polypropylene core layer of thin wall, open cell, honeycomb structure, in turn bonded to (4) a second face comprising a third layer of cured polyester resin having embedded therein a fabric of woven roving fiberglass, said third layer of cured polyester resin bonding said second face to the second side of said polypropylene core layer, and (5) means to prevent resin from said second and third layers from penetrating through the cells of the honeycomb structure core.
(1) a first face comprising a first layer of cured polyester resin bonded to (2) a second layer of cured polyester resin having embedded therein a fabric of woven roving fiberglass bonded by said second layer of cured resin to one side of (3) a polypropylene core layer of thin wall, open cell, honeycomb structure, in turn bonded to (4) a second face comprising a third layer of cured polyester resin having embedded therein a fabric of woven roving fiberglass, said third layer of cured polyester resin bonding said second face to the second side of said polypropylene core layer, and (5) means to prevent resin from said second and third layers from penetrating through the cells of the honeycomb structure core.
2. A composite panel as claimed in claim 1 in which the means to prevent resin from said second and third layers from penetrating the cells of the honeycomb structure is a thin mat of non-woven, randomly oriented fiberglass adhered to the open ends of the cells on each face of the honeycomb structure.
3. A composite panel as claimed in claim 1 in which the means to prevent resin from said second and third layers from penetrating the cells of the honeycomb is a filling of low density foamed plastic in the cells.
4. A panel as claimed in claim 2, and further having around the perimeter of the core layer, between the second and third layers page 15 of cured, polyester resin, edge strips of wood having substantially the same thickness as the honeycomb structure.
5. A panel as claimed in claim 4 in which the strips of wood are between two and five inches in width.
6. A panel as claimed in claim 3 and further having around the perimeter of the core layer, between the second and third layers of cured polyester resin, edge strips of wood having substantially the same thickness as the honeycomb structure.
7. A panel as claimed in claim 6 in which the strips of wood are between two and five inches in width.
8. A panel as claimed in claim 3 in which the foamed plastic in the cells is foamed polyurethane having a density in the range of 1.7 to 2.1 lb/cuft.
9. A panel as claimed in claim 3 in which the foamed plastic is foamed polystyrene.
10. A method of manufacturing a composite panel which comprises:
(1) forming a thin continuous first layer of curable liquid unsaturated polyester gel coat resin on the top of a flat smooth, substantially level mold;
(2) Curing said first layer to a hard outer first facing for the composite panel;
(3) forming a second continuous and thicker layer of a second curable liquid unsaturated polyester resin on top of the total area of said first layer;
(4) embedding a first continuous fabric layer of woven roving fiberglass in said second layer of liquid resin to cover the area of said first facing;
(5) laying abutting sections of a thin wall, open cell, page 16 polypropylene honeycomb structure in said second layer of liquid resin on top of said first fabric layer to cover the area thereof, said sections of honeycomb structure having means on each open cell face to prevent penetration of said second liquid resin through said open cells;
(6) covering the mold with a flexible air impervious resin film of polyethylene or polyvinyl chloride non-adherent to cured polyester resin to form an airtight cover over the mold;
(7) evacuating air from the mold under the said cover while said second layer of polyester resin is cured;
(8) removing the said cover from said mold;
(9) forming a third continuous layer of said second curable liquid unsaturated polyester resin on top of the upper face of the honeycomb structures;
(10) embedding a second continuous fabric layer of woven roving fiberglass in said third layer of liquid resin to cover the area thereof;
(11) curing said third layer of resin, then removing the composite panel from the mold.
(1) forming a thin continuous first layer of curable liquid unsaturated polyester gel coat resin on the top of a flat smooth, substantially level mold;
(2) Curing said first layer to a hard outer first facing for the composite panel;
(3) forming a second continuous and thicker layer of a second curable liquid unsaturated polyester resin on top of the total area of said first layer;
(4) embedding a first continuous fabric layer of woven roving fiberglass in said second layer of liquid resin to cover the area of said first facing;
(5) laying abutting sections of a thin wall, open cell, page 16 polypropylene honeycomb structure in said second layer of liquid resin on top of said first fabric layer to cover the area thereof, said sections of honeycomb structure having means on each open cell face to prevent penetration of said second liquid resin through said open cells;
(6) covering the mold with a flexible air impervious resin film of polyethylene or polyvinyl chloride non-adherent to cured polyester resin to form an airtight cover over the mold;
(7) evacuating air from the mold under the said cover while said second layer of polyester resin is cured;
(8) removing the said cover from said mold;
(9) forming a third continuous layer of said second curable liquid unsaturated polyester resin on top of the upper face of the honeycomb structures;
(10) embedding a second continuous fabric layer of woven roving fiberglass in said third layer of liquid resin to cover the area thereof;
(11) curing said third layer of resin, then removing the composite panel from the mold.
11. A method as claimed in claim 10 in which the means, on each open cell face of said sections of honeycomb structure, to prevent penetration of said second liquid resin through said open cells, is a thin mat of non-woven, randomly oriented fiberglass adhered to the open ends of the open cells.
12. A method as claimed in claim 10 in which the means on each open cell face of said sections of honeycomb structure, to prevent penetration of said second liquid resin through said cells, is a filling of low density foamed plastic with which the cells have been filled prior to laying the sections of honeycomb page 17 on said second liquid resin.
page 18
page 18
Priority Applications (1)
Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
---|---|---|---|
CA000590729A CA1290234C (en) | 1989-02-10 | 1989-02-10 | Composite panel structure |
Applications Claiming Priority (1)
Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
---|---|---|---|
CA000590729A CA1290234C (en) | 1989-02-10 | 1989-02-10 | Composite panel structure |
Publications (1)
Publication Number | Publication Date |
---|---|
CA1290234C true CA1290234C (en) | 1991-10-08 |
Family
ID=4139608
Family Applications (1)
Application Number | Title | Priority Date | Filing Date |
---|---|---|---|
CA000590729A Expired - Lifetime CA1290234C (en) | 1989-02-10 | 1989-02-10 | Composite panel structure |
Country Status (1)
Country | Link |
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CA (1) | CA1290234C (en) |
Cited By (3)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
EP2363277A1 (en) * | 2004-06-18 | 2011-09-07 | Zephyros Inc. | Panel Structure |
CN107618457A (en) * | 2016-07-13 | 2018-01-23 | 天津富松汽车零部件有限公司 | Impact resistance honeycomb gusset plate |
CN113978932A (en) * | 2021-12-03 | 2022-01-28 | 阳铭 | Cushion packaging structure, cushion packaging body, packaging assembly and packaging method |
-
1989
- 1989-02-10 CA CA000590729A patent/CA1290234C/en not_active Expired - Lifetime
Cited By (3)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
EP2363277A1 (en) * | 2004-06-18 | 2011-09-07 | Zephyros Inc. | Panel Structure |
CN107618457A (en) * | 2016-07-13 | 2018-01-23 | 天津富松汽车零部件有限公司 | Impact resistance honeycomb gusset plate |
CN113978932A (en) * | 2021-12-03 | 2022-01-28 | 阳铭 | Cushion packaging structure, cushion packaging body, packaging assembly and packaging method |
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