Citation:
Stephen J Buggy, Edmond Chehura, Alexandros A Skordos, Athanasios Dimopoulos, Stephen W James, Ivana K Partridge, Ralph P Tatam. Fibre grating refractometer sensors for composite process monitoring. Proc. SPIE 6616, Optical Measurement Systems for Industrial Inspection V, 661635, June 18-22, 2007, Munich, Germany.
Abstract:
Optimum performance from advanced composites requires careful control of the
resin matrix during cure. This is to ensure there are no cure induced voids and
to minimise the build up of internal stresses. Careful control of the process is
also necessary to reduce wastage. Traditional resin inspection techniques are
bulk or sample oriented and thus cannot provide data about critical component
parts. Optical fibre based sensors however, allow for in-situ monitoring
techniques to be deployed in components without effecting their structural
integrity. In this work, two fibre optic grating techniques are demonstrated as
process monitoring sensors and are compared with a Fresnel refractometric
method. The change in refractive index of a resin has previously been used as a
means for assessing the degree of cure. The central wavelength of an attenuation
band of a long period grating (LPG) was monitored during the cure of a resin. In
parallel the spectral resonances of a tilted fibre Bragg grating (FBG) are also
monitored. The two techniques are shown to correlate well with the Fresnel based
method in both detecting the resin and monitoring the state of cure, indicating
the potential of the techniques for online production monitoring