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Source: Article of High Performance Composites
Complex composites
lighten NATO copter
Dutch consortium develops advanced composite critical landing gear that
meets NH90 helicopter performancerequirements.
Design Results:
• Lighter and stronger than existing metal design
• Braided reinforcement permits preform automation
• Performance testing validates finite element analysis predictions
The
application of carbon fiber composites to the wings and fuselage of a newly
designed aircraft is now standard practice. One area of aircraft design that
continues to elude the composites community, however, is the landing gear. As
primary structural elements with concentrated loads, conservativedesign practice
has traditionally dictated metal in these components. This may change if a team
of Dutch companies and scientists is successful in its quest to design and fabricate
lightweight, durable composite landing gear for heli-copters and fixed wing
aircraft. SP aerospace and vehicle systems (Geldrop, The Netherlands) is under
contract for the development, qualification and production of a retractable,
crashworthy NH90 Rear Landing Gear Assembly landing gear for the NATO NH90 helicopter,
in both Army (TTH, or Tactical Transport Helicopter) and Navy (NFH, or NATO
Frigate Helicopter) versions. A joint development of Eurocopter (France and
Germany), Agusta (Italy) and Fokker (The Netherlands), this 10-ton-class helicopter
will be used for a wide variety of tasks, such as troop transport, cargo transport
and anti-submarine operations. Composites are widely used throughout the helicopter,
such as in the airframe, stabilizers, and the rotor blades. Development prototypes
of the helicopter have been flying since 1995 and the first serial production
delivery is scheduled for 2004. The NATO Helicopter Management Agency (NAHEMA),
consisting of France, Germany, Italy, The Netherlands and Portugal, has ordered
253 helicopters with an option for 124 more. The Nordic countries (Sweden, Finland
and Norway) have ordered 52 units, with an option for an additional 17. The
landing gear is currently designed in metal. In the mid-1990s, SP aerospace,
in conjunction with the Structures and Materials Division of the Netherlands
National Aerospace Laboratory, NLR (Amsterdam, The Netherlands) began exploring
the use of advanced composites, convinced that composites technology had matured
to a point where a landing gear application was practical, according to René
Hekerman, engineering manager for SP aerospace. In 1996, the team initiated
a technology development project to design, build and validate carbon fiber
composite torque links and a trailing arm assembly based on NH90 landing gear
specifications. SP aerospace is the lead company for the project, responsible
for concept design component specifications, integration of components into
the landing gear, and component testing and qualification. NLR is handling the
conceptual design for the composite elements, development of design allowables,
development and manufacture of the RTM production molds and the composite parts,
and subsequent testing of the subcomponents. Two additional partners provide
specific expertise: Eurocarbon (Sittard, The Netherlands) has responsibility
for the development of a fully automated overbraiding technique for the fabrication
of cost-effective preforms for the composite trailing arms, while MSG Software
Benelux BV (Gouda, The Netherlands) provides the finite element analysis (FEA)
of the mechanical strength of the composite structures.
Funded by the Dutch Government and the partners themselves, the program is split
into two phases: technology development and validation. The torque link was
developed from 1996 to 1999. This relatively simple component was used as a
demonstrator in order to bring the design, analysis and RTM capabilities to
a higher level. This enabled development of the trailing arm's very complex
shape, which was had its beginnings in 1998 and was largely completed in 2002.
Complex parts take advantage of design and analysis software
For design purposes, loads were derived from helicopter landing and ground and
ship deck handling cases. The specified crash landing speed of 11m/36 ft per
second results in a combination of severe bending and torsion loads on the trailing
arm. In order to guarantee sufficient damage tolerance, maximum allowable design
strain levels were determined experimentally. Since the landing gear components
have concentrated load introductions, design strain levels for pin-loaded holes
(the openings into which pivot pins are inserted vvhen landing gear components
are joined together) were determined by testing sub-components.
Other factors considered during the design process were affordability and manufacturability,
impact scenarios, maximum operating temperatures, chemical resistance to hydraulic
fluids, and galvanic corrosion between the bushings and the composite components,
explains
Bert Thuis, NLR's group manager, development and evaluation.
The parts were designed at SP aerospace using Pro/Engineer software (PTC, Needham,
Mass., U.S.A.), while NLR used CATIA (IBM PLM, Dallas, Texas, U.S.A.) for the
tooling design. From the different finite element codes that are supplied by
MSC Software, the team opted to use MSC Marc for this project, notes Maarten
Oudendijk, MSC software's technical consultant. This decision was based on the
nonlinear capabilities of the program in the areas of material behavior (i.e.,
material failure) and geometry, e.g., automated 3-D contact between the structure's
different modeled components.
MSC.Marc has the capacity to analyze layered composite materials, with different
fiber orientations in each layer. Some sections of the trailing arm have up
to 50 layers of reinforcement, which greatly complicates the analysis. To reduce
the number of elements and the number of degrees of freedom in the system, routines
have been developed to treat the layered composite as a homogenized, but still
orthotropic, material. To derive these homogenized material properties, numerical
tests are performed on a unit cell — the cube of material that makes up
a "finite element" within the layered material. The results from these
numerical experiments are then converted to averaged properties. A damage model
is implemented, which simulates a fracture in one area of the part and determines
whether or not the resulting loads would propagate that damage to other areas,
i.e., exceed their limit loads and cause delamination. This also has been applied
to the homogenized material, by calculating the damage throughout the layered
material. The analysis portion of the project was divided into three sub-projects,
involving the analyses of the torque-link, the mid-section of the trailingarm
and the full-scale trailingarm.
Preforming and RTM prove manufacturing capability
Resin transfer molding (RTM) was selected as the fabrication method for both
components because the shapes of landing
gear
components often are complex and therefore very difficult or even impossible
to make using traditional prepreg/autoclave technologies, NLR's Thuis emphasizes.
Preforms for the torque links and the trailing arm's center lugs are hand layed,
using woven carbon fiber fabrics supplied by C. Cramer & Co. (Heek-Nienborg,
Germany). The composite trailing arm preform is made as follows. First, two
cured carbon/epoxy tubes made with roll-wrapped prepreg are bonded to a core
made of a low melting metallic alloy. This assembly is then triaxially overbraided
by Eurocarbon using T300-12K carbon fiber from SOFICAR, a division
of Toray Carbon Fibers (Abidos, France).
According to Eurocarbon managing director Arnold Voskamp, approxiately 60 percent
of the fibers are placed in the ±45° orientation, and 40 percent
in the longitudinal direction. By design, final wall thickness varies from 15
to 30 mm/0.6 to 1.2 inches at over 50 percent fiber volume. The braider used
is a computer-controlled 96 carrier machine, and can handle parts as large as
600 mm/23.6 inches in diameter and as much as 7 m/23 ft long. Voskamp says Eurocarbon
recently installed a 216 carrier machine for even larger preforms.
Before loading the RTM molds, the trailing arm preform and lug preform are assembled. The combined preform is then positioned within an aluminum tool. After closure, the mold is heated and a specially formulated epoxy resin from Cytec Engineered Materials (Tempe, Ariz., U.S.A.) is injected under pressure over a period of several hours. In order to determine the optimal injection strategy, extensive flow simulations were carried out at NLR. During the RTM cycle, a data acquisition system records the most important parameters, such as resin temperature, mold temperature, resin flow and injection pressure, in order to demonstrate reproducibility of the RTM process, Thuis explains. After a two-to-three hour cure in the mold, the composite trailing arm is removed and positioned in an oven for a free standing post-cure, during which the alloy core melts out. The alloy can be reused in the next trailing arm. The only machining required is cutting the ends of the trailing arm, milling the edges of the lugs and drilling the holes in the lugs. The upper and lower torque links are approximately 175 mm/7 inches long and weigh 0.12 to 0.13kg/0.26 to 0.28 Ib, a 30 percent reduction compared to a baseline aluminum part. The trailingarm is 900 mm/35.4 inches long and the mass of the composite part is approximately 13 kg/29 Ib. The total weight of the trailing arm assembly with all attachments, bronze bushings and steel wheel axle is approximately 22 kg/48 lb., a 20 percent reduction compared to the original 300M ultra- high-strength steel part.
Positive results lead to more opportunities
SP's Hekerman explains that the goal of the project is to develop the design
and manufacturing technology and test a series of demonstrator parts, thus no
field testing on a helicopter is currently scheduled. The results to date are
so encouraging that
SP
may soon ask its NH90 partners to consider taking the trailing arm to qualification
and full series production. So far, a series of torque links were mechanically
tested, and performed to expectations. A subcomponent of the trailing arm, incorporating
the mid-section with the load introduction lugs, also was mechanically tested
and the results used to verify and optimize the FEA analysis. The manufacturing
of more demonstration articles is still in progress. These will undergo static
tests to ultimate (crash) loads, with and without impact damage. In the program's
second phase, additional trailing arms will be manufactured and subjected to
more extensive testing, including fatigue and dynamic drop tests. Hekerman believes
the program has achieved significant technology advances. The partners have
successfully automated production of preforms for and demonstrated high-quality
resin injection of large, complex aerospace parts. In addition, they've achieved
the more specific goal of manufacturing composite landing gear components with
better performance, lower weight and at equal or lower cost than metal counterparts.
Parallel to the trailing arm program, SP and NLR, with support of the Royal
Netherlands Air Force, have developed a carbon/epoxy drag brace, a structural
component for the F-16 main landing gear, using the resin transfer molding (RTM)
process. The part was tested, cleared for flight and, in early 2001, installed
on a Royal Netherlands Air Force F-16, and since has successfully completed
a number of flight tests. Furthermore, SP has just started a program to develop
a similar component for a civil aircraft, intending to go to full qualification
for serial production.
Coöperating Companies
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| National
Aerospace Laboratory |
MSC.Software
Benelux B.V. Groningenweg 6 NL-2803 PV Gouda Tel. +31 182 543 700 Fax. +31 182 543 707 maarten.oudendijk@mscsoftware.com |
Eurocarbon
B.V. |
SP
aerospace and vehicle systems |
New gusset filler programme developed
Standard Programme Gusset Filler
Download
standard programme gussetfiller
Our Standard Programme Gussetfiller
is specially designed to fill up gussets in preforms.
When fabrics are plied into shapes
like type 1 and type 2 a hollow space is created.
In injection systems this hollow space will create a runner where the resin
will go through without respecting the resin front. If this behaviour is not
desired a filler is needed to 'plug' the created resin channel.

The optimum as filling material is the same meterial as the fabric beaing used. This leads even to more performance of the produced part.
Eurocarbon has developed a selection of special braids with special characteristics to fill up the gusset filler

The gusset filler are:
See
the table below for availlable gusset fillers
| Article
number |
Ø
in mm |
Grams
/ meter |
Cross-section area in mm2 at 50 Volume % |
| B-008/01 |
1,7 |
3,5 |
3,9 |
| L-008/04 |
2,5 |
4,4 |
4,9 |
| L-008/05 |
3,0 |
5,3 |
5,88 |
| L-008/06 |
3,5 |
7,7 |
8,56 |
| L-008/07 |
3,8 |
10,1 |
11,2 |
| L-008/08 |
4,1 |
12,6 |
14,0 |
| L-008/09 |
4,4 |
15 |
16,6 |
| L-008/10 |
5,4 |
20,3 |
22,6 |
| L-008/11 |
6,0 |
25,6 |
28,4 |
| L-008/12 |
6,1 |
30 |
33,4 |
| L-008/13 |
7,0 |
35,2 |
39,2 |
| L-008/14 |
7,7 |
41 |
45,6 |
| L-016/07 |
10 |
51 |
56,6 |
The table above is displaying the cross section area at 50% volume fraction. In the table below you can see the area of each type of radius.
Area
in mm2 |
||
| Radius |
Type 1 |
Type 2 |
| 3 |
1,93 |
3,86 |
| 4 |
3,43 |
6,87 |
| 5 |
5,37 |
10,73 |
| 6 |
7,73 |
15,45 |
| 7 |
10,52 |
21,03 |
| 8 |
13,73 |
27,47 |
| 9 |
17,38 |
34,77 |
Also exotic fibres are avallable like T800, T1000, M46, etc.
Eurocarbon also produces custome made gusset fillers. If you ideal filler is not listed don't hesitate to ask for an inquiry.