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There are currently 363 technical terms in this directory
ACETONE
In the context of FRP, primarily useful as a cleaning solvent for removal of uncured resin from applicator equipment and clothing. Very Flammable Liquid.
ADDITIVE
Any number of materials used to modify the properties of polymer resins. Categories of additives include reagents, fillers, viscosity modifiers, pigments, UV absorbers, flame retardant materials, waxes, promoters etc.
ADHESIVE FAILURE
Failure in an adhesive joint that occurs between the adhesive material and the adherend; contrast with Cohesive Failure.
AIR DRY
To cure at room temperature with addition of catalyst but without assistance of heat and pressure.
ALLIGATORING
Wrinkling of gel coat film resembling alligator hide; caused by poor cure at time of contact with styrene from a subsequent or preceding coat.
ARCING
Spray method which should normally be avoided as it consists of directing spray passes by gun rotation at the wrist (arcing), as opposed to conventional stroke from shoulder, keeping fan pattern perpendicular to mould.
AUTO-IGNITION TEMPERATURE
Lowest temperature required to initiate or cause self sustained combustion in absence of a spark or a flame.
AUTOCLAVE MOLDING
Moulding technique in which an entire composite assembly is placed in an autoclave (or closed vessel with pressure/heat capability) at 50 to 10 psi pressure to consolidate the laminate by removing entrapped air and volatiles.
BAG MOLDING
Technique in which composite material is placed in rigid mould and covered with flexible bag. Pressure is applied by vacuum, autoclave, press, or by inflating the bag.
BALANCED
Laminate design term used with aligned-fibre composites to indicate that each ply oriented at plus theta degrees is matched by a ply at minus theta degrees. When plus theta is zero degrees, minus theta is 90 degrees. See related Symmetric. Laminate can be balanced and not be symmetric.
BARCOL HARDNESS
A measure of surface hardness made with a Barcol Impressor instrument in accordance with ASTM D-2583. The harness value can be used as an indication of the degree of cure of a gel coat or laminate.
BARCOL IMPRESSOR
Instrument invented by Walter Colman during WWII to measure hardness of soft metals; manufactured by Barber-Colman Company. Two types are commonly used in the FRP industry. Model 934 is used to check ultimate cure; Model 935 is used for initial readings prior to
BATCH (OR LOT)
Identity for all material produced during one operation possessing identical characteristics throughout.
BENZOYL PEROXIDE (BPO)
Catalyst used in conjunction with aniline accelerators or where heat is used as an accelerator.
BI-DIRECTIONAL
Arrangement of reinforcing fibre strands in which half the strands are laid at right angles to the other half; a directional pattern that provides maximum product strength to those two directions.
BINDER
Bonding resin applied to glass fibres to hold them in position in a broadgoods textile structure. During lamination, this resin is dissolved by the styrene in polyester resin, and, if unsaturated, can become part of the final polymer network.
BINDERLESS CHOPPED STRAND MAT
Textile material consisting of short glass fibres held together with polymer fibre cross-stitch; resembles chopped strand mat without the binder. Also called Stitched Chopped Strand Mat.
BLEED OUT
Excess liquid resin appearing at the surface, primarily occurring during filament winding or from an RTM mould tube.
BLEEDER PLY
Layer of porous material placed in a vacuum bag to absorb excess resin and allow air and gas to escape.
BLEEDING
Result of softening of backside of gel coat (typically by laminating resin or post applied gel coat) which causes pigments (colour) to reflow.
BLISTER
A void formed within a composite that may be the result of either trapping air in a laminate, or chemical action within the laminate.
BRIDGING
Condition that occurs when textile or sheet material does not conform to inside edge or radius on mould or laminate surface and does not come into contact with the laminate below.
BULK MOLDING COMPOUND (BMC)
Premixed blend of thermosetting resin, reinforcements, catalysts and fillers for use in closed moulding process. Similar to sheet moulding compound (SMC) but mechanical qualities are not as good, and it is less expensive.
CARBON (OR GRAPHITE) FIBRE
Reinforcing fibre known for its light weight, high strength, and high stiffness.
CAST POLYMER
The process of pouring a mixture of resin, fillers and/or fibres into a mould as opposed to building up layers through lamination. This technique produces different physical properties from laminating.
CATALYST
In a scientific sense, the substance that promotes or controls the curing of compound without being consumed in the reaction (initiator). Within the composites industry, free radial initiators such as MEKP are often referred to as “catalysts”. Such usage is scientifically inaccurate since initiator is consumed during usage.
CATALYST (PEROXIDE)
In FRO terms, substance added to resin or gel coat in controlled quantities to make it gel and cure. Catalyst is reduced by accelerator, creating free radicals, which in turn initiate polymerization.
CATALYST INJECTION
Used with spray equipment to catalyse polyester at spray gun, therefore eliminating the need to clean system within gel time of polyester. Internal mix guns require a solvent flush for cleaning gun head.
CAVITY
Space between matched moulds (pressure moulds) in which laminate is formed. Also, a term for a female mould.
CENTIPOISES
(CPS) A unit of measure used to describe the viscosity of a liquid. Viscosity is measured with a Brookfield Viscometer for most polyester resin applications. At 21 deg.C water is on cps.
CHALKING
A surface phenomenon indicating degradation of a cosmetic surface. Chalking is a powdery film that appears lighter than the original colour.
CHOPPED STRAND MAT
A fibreglass reinforcement consisting of short strands of fibre arranged in a random pattern and held together with a binder. Mat is generally used in rolls consisting of 225 – 600gm/m2 material.
CLOSED MOLDING
Fabrication process in which composite part is produced in a mould cavity formed by the joining of two or more tool pieces.
CLOTH
A fibreglass reinforcement made by weaving strands of glass fibre yarns. Cloth is available in various weights measured in ounces per square yard or Kg/2.
COEFFICIENT OF THERMAL EXPANSION (CTE)
Material’s fractional change in dimension for given unit change of temperature.
COHESION
Tendency of single substance to adhere to itself. Also, force holding single substance together.
COHESIVE FAILURE
Failure of adhesive joint that occurs either within adhesive material or within one or both adherends.
COMPOSITE
A material made of distinct components. For example, a reinforcing fibre in a resin matrix where the combined properties are superior to the individual materials.
COMPRESSION MOLD
Mould that is open when material is introduced and that shapes material by heat and by the pressure of closing.
COMPRESSIVE STRENGTH
Resistance to crushing or buckling force; maximum compressive load specimen sustains divided by its original cross-sectional area.
CONSOLIDATION
Processing step that compresses fibre and matrix to remove excess resin, reduce voids and achieve particular density.
CONTACT MOLDING
Refers to the use of a single or open mould onto which resin and reinforcement materials can be applied. Contact moulding is characterised by one finished cosmetic side.
CONTINUOUS FILAMENT STRAND
A fibre bundle composed of many glass filaments. Also, when referring to gun roving, a collection of string like glass fibre or yard, which is fed through a chopper gun in the spray up process.
CONTINUOUS STRAND ROVING
A bundle of glass filaments which are fed through a chopper gun in the spray up process.
CORD, REINFORCING
Loosely twisted cord made up from rovings and designed for incorporation in mouldings where edge reinforcement and high strength ribs are necessary.
CORE
A low-density material used between two FRP skins. Examples of core materials are end-grain balsa wood, urethane foam, PVC foam and various honeycomb materials.
CORE ORIENTATION
On honeycomb core, used to line up ribbon direction, thickness of cell depth, cell size, and transverse direction.
CORNER
Geometric feature characterised as point where three edges come together, as in a box corner. Can be either inside corner or outside corner.
COSMIC STABILITY
Capability of substance or part to maintain appearance with respect to surface smoothness, colour, gloss or other visual appearance characteristics.
CREEL
Device used to hold required number of roving spools or other supply packages of reinforcement in desired position for unwinding.
CREEP
Over time, dimensional change in material under physical load (beyond initial elastic deformation).
CROSS-LAMINATED
Laminated so some layers are oriented at right angles to remaining layers with respect to grain or strongest direction in tension.
CROSS-LINKING
The chemical bonding of molecules which in polymerisation occurs in the curing transition from a liquid to a thermoset solid.
CURE
The completion of the cross-linking process during which a composite develops its full strength.
CURING AGENT
An initiator or catalyst that initiates polymerisation when added to a resin. For epoxies these are known as hardeners.
DELAMINATE - Separation of layers due to failure of adhesion or cohesion of one component to others. Also includes separation of layers of fabric from core structure. May be associated with bridging, drilling and trimming.
DELAMINATION
Laminate defect that occurs due to mechanical or thermal stress and is characterised by separation between laminae.
DENSITY
A comparison of weight per volume, measured in pounds per cubic foot, grams per litre or pounds per gallon.
DESIGN ALLOWABLE
Limiting – value for material property that can be used to design structural or mechanical system to specified level of success with 95 per cent statistical confidence.
DIELECTRIC STRENGTH
Non conductor of electricity; ability of material to resist flow of an electrical current.
DIETHYLANILINE (DEA)
Accelerator used in conjunction with BPO catalyst, or as co-promoter for cobalt/MEKP systems.
DIMENSIONAL STABILITY
Capability of substance or part to maintain its shape when subjected to varying forces, moments, degrees of temperature and moisture, or other stress.
DIMPLES
Small sunken dots in gel coat surface, generally caused by foreign particle, air void, or catalyst droplets in gel coat or laminate.
DISTORTION
A change in shape from that which is intended. Wavy gel coat surface reflection often found in conjunction with print-through. Commonly caused by a problem in laminating system.
DOUBLER
Extra layers of reinforcement for added stiffness or strength where fasteners or other abrupt load transfers occur.
DRAFT ANGLE- Mould or mandrel’s taper or angle for ease of part removal (minimum of 3 degrees is recommended).
DRY SPOT
Laminate defect that occurs during moulding process and is characterised by dry, unwet fibres that have never been encapsulated by matrix material.
E-GLASS
Originally formulated for use in electric circuitry, e-glass is the most common glass formulation used in fibreglass reinforcements.
EDGE
Geometric feature characterised as line formed where two panels on different planes come together. When angle between two panels is between zero and 180 degrees, edge is inside. When angle is between 180 and 360 degrees, edge is outside.
ELASTOMER
Material that substantially recovers original shape and size at room temperature after removal of deforming force.
ELONGATION
Standard measure for the amount a sample can stretch as percentage of original length before it fails or breaks.
EXOTHERMIC HEAT
Internally developed heat accompanying a chemical reaction, such as might be created when a thermoset resin is cross linking.
EXTENDERS
Low cost materials used to dilute or extend higher-cost resins without excessive reduction in properties.
FABRIC, NONWOVEN
Material formed from fibres or yarns without interlacing, (e.g.: stitched nonwoven broad goods),
FELT
Fibrous material made up of interlocking fibres by mechanical or chemical action, pressure or heat. Felts may be made of cotton, glass or other fibres.
FIBRE
Individual rod of sufficiently small diameter to be flexible, having known or approximate limit of length.
FIBRE BLOOMING
Fibre and resin are eroded by weathering or sandpaper at different rates. Resins erode before fibre. As a result, fibre rich surface, when sanded, often has fibres protruding; called fibre blooming.
FIBRE GLASS
Glass that has been extruded into extremely fine filaments. These filaments vary in diameter and are measured in microns. Glass filaments are treated with special binders and processed similar to textile fibres. These fibres come in many forms such as roving, woven roving, mat and continuous strands.
FIBRE ORIENTATION
The direction of fibre alignment in a laminate. Chopped strand mat has isotropic (all directions) orientation. Knitted ad woven fabrics can have two or more orientations such as 0 deg/90 deg or +45 deg/-45 deg.
FIBRE PRINT
Cosmetic defect, visible on exterior gel coat surface that resembles fibre bundle and reflects architecture of glass reinforcement bundle at or near part surface.
FIBRE REINFORCED PLASTICS (FRP)
General term for composite material or part that consists of plastic matrix containing reinforcing fibres such as glass or carbon having greater strength or stiffness than plastic. FRP is most often used to denote glass fibre-reinforced plastics. “Advanced composite” usually indicates high-performance aramid or carbon fibre-reinforced plastics.
FIBREGLASS
Fibbers similar to wool or cotton fibres but made from glass; sometimes called fibrous glass. Glass fibre forms include cloth, yarn, mat, milled fibres, chopped strands, roving, woven roving.
FILAMENT
Single, thread-like fibre or number of these fibres drawn together. Variety of fibre characterised by extreme length, which permits its use in yarn with little or no twist and usually without spinning operation required for fibres.
FILAMENT WINDING
Process for production of high strength, lightweight products in which tape, roving or single strands are fed from creel through bath of resin (or fed dry using pre-impregnated roving) and wound on suitably designed mandrel. Wound mandrel can be cured at room temperature or in oven.
FILLERS
Relatively inert organic or inorganic materials which are added to resins or gel coats for special flow characteristics, to extend volume, and to low cost of article being produced.
FINISH
Surface treatment applied to fibres or filaments after they are fabricated into strands, yarn or woven fabrics to allow resins to flow freely around and adhere to them.
FIRE POINT
Lowest temperature at which liquid in open container will give off enough vapours to continue to burn one ignited. Fire point generally is only slightly higher than flash point.
FISHEYES
Circular separation in gel coat film generally caused by contamination such as silicone, oil, dust, water, freshly waxed mould, or low gel coat viscosity.
FLAME RETARDANT RESIN
A polyester resin that has been specifically formulated to reduce the flame spread and/or smoke generation characteristics.
FLAMMABILITY
A measure of how fast a material will burn under controlled conditions. ASTM D-635/UL E-894 tests.
FLANGE
An extension around the perimeter of a mould or part for the purposes of demoulding, stiffening, or connecting two components; or for containing over spray.
FLASH POINT
Lowest temperature at which substance emits enough vapours to form flammable or ignitable mixture with air near the surface of the substance being tested.
FLEXURAL MODULUS
Ratio, within elastic limit, of applied stress in test sample in flexure to corresponding strain in outermost fibres of sample. ASTM D-790
FLEXURAL STRENGTH
Strength of material (in bending) expressed as stress of bent test sample at instant of failure; usually expressed in force per unit area.
FLOODING
High delivery rate from spray gun; in pigmented systems, difference in colour between surface and bulk of film.
FRACTURE
Rupture of surface of laminate due to external or internal forces; may or may not result in complete separation.
FREE RADICALS
Highly reactive molecular fragments capable of initiating chemical reactions, such as polymerization of polyester resins.
FRIABLE
Term used to describe material that, when dry, can be crumbled, pulverised, or reduced to powder by hand pressure.
FRP
Fibre Reinforced Polymers, with evolution of new fibrous materials, GRP (or GRFP) becomes Glass Reinforced Polymers term.
FUMED SILICA (Trade names: Aerosil, Cabosil)
Thickening agent used in polyesters to increase flow or sag resistance qualities, especially on vertical surfaces.
GEL
Partial cure stage in plastics resins of a viscous, jelly-like state where liquid material starts to transform into solid.
GEL COAT
A surface coat of specialised polyester resin, either coloured or clear, providing a cosmetic enhancement and weatherability to a fibreglass laminate.
GLASS TRANSITION
Reversible change in an amorphous polymer between a viscous or rubbery condition and a hard, relatively brittle one.
GLASS TRANSITION TEMPERATURE (Tg)
Approximate temperature above which increased molecular mobility causes a material to become rubbery rather than brittle. The measure value of Tg can vary, depending on the test method. (A widely accepted method is Differential Scanning Colorimeter – DSC.)
HAND LAY UP
The process of manually building up layers of fibreglass, with roll stock reinforcements and resin, using hand rollers, brushes and spray equipment.
HAP
Acronym for Hazardous Air Pollutants. Over 180 chemicals identified by Congress in 1990 Clean Air Act, Section 112. In this law, Congress mandated EPA to control emissions of these chemicals. EPA has endeavoured to do this through a series of MACT standards (see (MACT”).
HEAT
Term used colloquially to indicate any temperature above ambient (room) temperature, to which part or material is or will be subjected.
HEAT-DISTORTION TEMPERATURE (HDT)
Temperature at which test bar deflects a certain amount under specified load (e.g.: temperature at which material softens).
HONEYCOMB
Manufactured product of sheet metal or resin-impregnated sheet (paper, fibrous glass, etc.) that has been formed into hexagonal shaped cells. Used as core material for sandwich construction.
HOOP STRESS
Circumferential stress in cylindrically shaped part as a result of internal or external pressure.
HYBRID COMPOSITE
Composite with two or more types of reinforcing fibres. Also refers to composite prepared from a polymer which uses more than one type of chemistry, such as XYCON polyester/polyurethane hybrid material.
IMPREGNATE
To saturate with resin. The most common application is saturating fibreglass with a catalyzed resin.
IN SITU
In original position. In filament winding, used to indicate mandrel that remains in place after winding, as opposed to mandrel that is removed after winding.
INHIBITOR
A substance designed to slow down or prevent chemical reaction; chemical additive that slows or delays cure cycle.
INJECTION MOLDING
Method of forming plastic to desired shape by forcibly injecting polymer into a mould.
INSERT
A piece of material put into a laminate during or before moulding to serve a definite purpose.
INTEGRAL HEATING
System in which heating elements are built into a tool, forming part of the tool and usually eliminating the need for oven or autoclave as a heat source.
INTERFACE
Surface between two materials in glass fibres, (e.g.: area at which glass and sizing meet). In laminate, area at which reinforcement and laminating resin meet.
INTERLAMINAR SHEAR
Shearing force that produces displacement between two laminae along plane of their interface.
INTUMESCENCE
A coating technology that causes the material to swell when exposed to heat, forming an insulating barrier to resist fire.
ISOPHTHALIC
A polyester resin based on isophthalic acid, generally higher in properties than a general purpose or orthophthalic polyester resin.
ISOTROPIC
The description of equal strength properties in all orientation. Isotropic composites are usually achieved by random fibre orientation.
JACKSTRAWING
Prominence of fibreglass pattern having turned white in the laminate because glass has separated from resin due to excessive exothermic heat; usually associated with thick, resin rich laminates. Cosmetic problem only.
JIG
Any fixture for holding parts in position, while joining them together or to maintain their shape.
LAMINA
One layer of laminate; can be chopped fibre reinforced plastic layer, textile reinforced plastic layer, or core material, etc. Plural is laminae.
LAMINATE (Noun)
Layers of a composite consisting of a resin and a reinforcement, bonded together to form a single structure.
LAMINATE (Verb)
The act of processing resin and reinforcement into a bonded structure. Saturating glass reinforcement and rolling out air voids is to laminate.
LAMINATED PLASTICS
Material consisting of superimposed layers of synthetic materials that have been bonded together, usually by mans of heat and pressure, to form a single piece.
LAMINATION
Layering on of layers of reinforcing materials and resin, much like build-up of plywood. Several layers of material bonded together.
LAYUP
The act of building up successive layers of polymer and reinforcement. Layers of catalysed resin and fibreglass or other reinforcements are applied to a mould in order to make a part. Layup is sometimes used as a term for the work piece itself.
LOW-PRESSURE LAMINATES
Laminates moulded and cured in range of pressures from 400 psi down to and including pressure obtained by mere contact of plies.
MACHED-METAL MOLDING/MATCHED-DIE MOLDING
Method of closed moulding in which reinforced plastics are moulded between two close-fitting metal moulds mounted in hydraulic press. Generally considered most economical mass production method for manufacturing FRP parts in large volumes.
MACT
Acronym for Maximum Achievable Control Technology Standards established by the EOA in response to the 1990 Clean Air Act, Section 112. These standards set forth regulations for reduced emissions of Hazardous Air Pollutants (see ‘HAP’).
MANDREL
Elongated mould around which resin-impregnated fibre, tape or filaments are wound to form structural shapes or tubes.
MASS
Quantity of matter contained in a specific body. In reference to polyesters, mass is measured in terms of weight and/or volume.
MASTER (Plug)
A full scale representation of the intended part, usually retained as a reference and the part from which production moulds are made.
MATRIX
Material in which fibre reinforcements of composite system is imbedded. Thermoplastic and thermoset resin systems can be used, as well as metal and ceramic.
MEK (SOLVENT)
Abbreviation for methyl ethyl ketone; colourless flammable liquid commonly used in spray gun clean-up procedures. Good for cleaning Epoxy Resins.
MEK PEROXIDE (MEKP)
Abbreviation for methyl ethyl ketone peroxide; free radical source commonly used as initiator for polyesters in FRP industry.
MILLED FIBRES
Carbon or glass used for making fibre-filled putty or C strands hammer-milled into short fibre lengths of 1/32 inch, 1/16-inch, 1/8 inch and ¼ inch.
MILS
Unit used in measuring film thickness and diameter of fibre strands, glass, wire, etc., (one mil = .001 inch).
MODULUS OF ELASTICITY
An engineering term used to describe a material’s ability to bend without losing its ability to return to its original physical properties.
MOISTURE ABSORPTION
Pick-up of water vapour from air by a material. Relates only to vapour withdrawn from air by a material; must be distinguished from water absorption, which is a gain in weight due to take-up of water by immersion.
MOLD
The tool used to fabricate the desired part shape. Also used to describe the process of making a part in a mould.
MOLD RELEASE
A wax or polymer compound that is applied to the mould surfaces acts as a barrier between the mould and the part, thus preventing the part from bonding to the mould.
NANOMETER
Abbreviated (nm) and equal to one millimicron or one billionth of meter, used to measure wavelengths of light.
NETSHAPE
A fabricated part that comes out of the mould and does not require cutting, trimming or machining
NON-AIR INHIBITED RESIN - Resin, cure of which will not be inhibited or stopped by presence of air, possibly due to surfacing agent added to exclude air from resin surface.
NON-DESTRUCTIVE INSPECTION (NDI)
Determining material or part characteristics without permanently altering test subject. Non-destructive testing (NDT) and non-destructive evaluation (NDE) widely considered synonymous with NDI.
ORANGE PEEL
A gel coated or painted finish that is not smooth and is patterned similar to an orange’s skin.
ORTHOPHTHALIC OR ORTHO RESIN
A polyester resin based on orthophthalic acid, also known as a general-purpose resin (GP).
PARALLEL-LAMINATED
Laminated so all layers of material are oriented approximately parallel with respect to the grain or strongest direction in tension. Also called unidirectional. This pattern allows the highest loading of reinforcement but gives maximum strength in only one direction.
PART CONSOLIDATION
Process of composites fabrication in which multiple discrete parts are designed and fabricated together into a single part, thus reducing the number of fabricated parts and the need to join those parts together.
PATTERN
General term for master model that is usually constructed from single material or material type. Pattern is generally not durable and suitable for producing only one (or small number) of moulds. Sometimes used interchangeably with Plug.
PEEL PLY
A removable non-stick fabric applied to a lay-up surface that is removed from the cured laminate prior to bonding operations in order to leave clean, resin-rich surface ready for bonding. -
PEROXIDES
Category of compounds containing unstable O-O (or O-OH) Group: Oxygen to Oxygen atoms; used as initiators.
PHENOLIC RESIN
Thermosetting resin produced by condensation of aromatic alcohol with aldehyde, particularly phenol with formaldehyde.
PIGMENT SEPARATION
Occurs when the pigment is not thoroughly mixed into the gel coat during formulation or the gel coat is improperly mixed prior to use. It is characterised by a non-homogeneous surface colour.
PINHOLES
Small air bubbles in gel coat film, few enough to count. Generally larger in size than porosity.
PLASTICS
Organic chemical compounds called polymers that can be formulated to produce a wide range of properties.
PLUG
General term for master model that is usually hand-crafted from a variety of materials. Plug is generally not durable; suitable for producing only one (or a small number) of moulds. Sometimes used interchangeably with “Pattern”.
PLY SCHEDULE
Layup of individual plies or layers to build laminate (FRP). Plies may be arranged (scheduled) in alternating fibre orientation to produce multi-directional strength part (see “Fibre Architecture”).
POLYESTER (Unsaturated)
Resin formed by reaction between dibasic acids and dihydroxy alcohols, one of which must be unsaturated (typically maleic anhydride) to permit cross-linking.
POROSITY
Small air bubbles in composite or gel coat film; too numerous to count. Generally small in size than pinholes.
POSTCURE
Exposure of cured resin to higher temperatures than during moulding; necessary in certain resins to attain complete cure and ultimate mechanical properties.
PRE-RELEASE
The premature release of the el coat or laminate from the mould. Pe-release causes cosmetic or dimensional problems.
PREFORM
Pre-shaped fibrous reinforcement formed by distribution of chopped fibres by air, water flotation, or vacuum over surface of perforated screen to approximate contour and thickness desired in finished part. Also, compact pill of compressed premixed materials.
PREFORM MAT
Fibre reinforced mat shaped like mould in which it will be used. Eliminates need for overlapping corners in moulding.
PREHEATING
Heating of compound prior to moulding or casting in order to facilitate operation, reduce moulding cycle, or remove volatiles.
PREPREG
Resin-impregnated cloth, mat or filaments in flat form that can be stored for later use. Resin often partially cured to tack-free state called “B-staging”. Additives can be added to obtain specific end-use properties and improve processing, storage and handling characteristics.
PRESSURE BAG
A membrane that conforms to the inside of a laminate laid-up on a mould. The membrane or bag is then inflated by applying pressure that consolidates and densifies the laminate.
PRINT THROUGH
A distortion in the surface of a part that allows the pattern of the core or fibreglass reinforcement to be visible through the surface. Also known as print out, telegraphing or read through.
PRODUCTION MOLD
durable, robust mould used to produce hundreds or thousands of part copies. Laminated production moulds are best manufactured from laminated master moulds.
PROFILE
Surface contour of part viewed from edge or cross section. When describing cosmetic features, profile is the roughness of surface on a scale large enough to affect visual appearance but small enough to be insignificant with respect to dimensional functionality. Low profile corresponds to very smooth surface; high profile corresponds to a surface with greater roughness.
PROMOTOR
An additive to speed up the cure. This additive is required for room temperature resin cure. See Accelerator.
PROTOTYPE
Process of creating test part not intended for commercial release that establishes design, material and fabrication parameters for new product. May require multiple iterations (repetitions) to arrive at final/commercial part design.
PULTRUSION
Automated continuous process for manufacturing composite rods, tubes and structural shapes having constant cross section. Roving and other reinforcements saturated with resin and continuously pulled through a heated die, where part is formed and cured. Cured part then automatically cut to length.
PUTTY
A thickened mixture of resin made by adding fillers, fumed silica (thixotropes) and reinforcing fibres.
RAMPING
Gradual programmed increase/decrease in temperature or pressure to control cure or cooling of composite parts.
REINFORCED MOLDING COMPOUND
Compound consisting of a polymer and a reinforcement fibre or filler supplied by raw material producer in the form of ready-to-use materials.
REINFORCEMENT
Strong, relatively inert material moulded into plastics to improve strength, stiffness and impact resistance. Usually fibres of glass, carbon, boron mineral, synthetic polymer, ceramic, textile, sisal, cotton, etc., in woven or non-woven form.
RELEASE AGENT
a compound used to reduce surface tension or adhesion between a mould and apart. See mould release.
RESIN PRESSURE HEAD
RTM process feature; state of pressure across a part from injection point to vent point; driving force that causes rein to flow through and saturate fibre pack.
RESIN TEARING
Separation of vehicle from pigments/fillers in gel coat film, usually seen as black wavy lines.
RESIN TRANSFER MOLDING (RTM)
moulding process in which catalysed resin is pumped into two-sided, matched mould where fibrous reinforcement has been placed. Mould and/or resin may or may not be heated.
RIBBON DIRECTION
On honeycomb core, direction in which honeycomb can be separated; direction of one continuous ribbon.
ROVING
Collection of bundles of continuous filaments either as untwisted strands or as twisted yarns. For filament winding, generally wound as bands or tapes with as little twist as possible.
S-GLASS
Magnesia/alumina/silicate glass reinforcement designed to provide very high tensile strength. Commonly used in high-performance parts. Has high compressive strength.
SAGS/RUNS
Sag: Slumping of gel coat or resin film. Run: Running of gel coat film or laminating resin.
SANDWICH CONSTRUCTION
A laminate with two composite skins separated by, but bonded to, a structural core material. Used to create, rigid, lightweight structures.
SECONDARY BONDING
Joining together by adhesive bonding of two or more previously cured parts, or subsequent lamination onto earlier cured laminate surface.
SET
To convert resin into fixed or hardened state by chemical or physical action, such as condensation, polymerization, vulcanization or gelation.
SHEAR
Stress resulting from applied forces. Caused by two contiguous parts of body sliding, relative to each other, in direction parallel to their plane of contact. In cross shear, plane of contact is composed of resin and glass fibres. In interlaminar shear (ILS), plane of contact is composed of resin only. In liquids, force and movement of components or layers against each other.
SHEET MOLDING COMPOUND (SMC)
Ready-to-mould, glass-fibre-reinforced, thickened polyester material primarily used in closed moulding. Similar to bulk moulding compound (BMC) but with improved mechanical properties.
SHELF LIFE
Length of time uncatalyzed polyester remains workable while stored in tightly sealed container; also referenced as “storage life”.
SHIP LAP
Method of joining two panels together by means of one panel having a recessed shelf to receive the other panel on top of it leaving a flush surface.
SHOT
One complete cycle on injection moulding machine. Shot weight is measured compound delivered to completely fill mould in injection or transfer moulding.
SISAL
White fibre produced from leaves of agave plant. Used as reinforcing filler, in short chopped lengths, to impart moderate impact resistance.
SIZING
Water-soluble solution of chemical additives used to coat filaments; additives protect filaments from water absorption and abrasion. They also lubricate filaments and reduce static electricity (see chapter on “Open moulding”).
SKIN LAMINATE
Thin, glass laminate applied directly against gel coat to pro vide durability by eliminating entrapped air, and good cosmetic quality by isolating gel coat from subsequent laminate shrinkage due to exotherm heat.
SLAVE PUMP
Small, specifically sized pump driven by master gel coat or resin pump to deliver catalyst in ratio of one to three per cent.
SPEC
Specification of properties, characteristics or requirements; a particular material or part must have to be accept able to potential user of material or part.
SPECIFIC GRAVITY
Ratio of weight of any volume of substance to weight of equal volume of some substance taken as standard unit; usually water for solids and liquids, and air or hydrogen for gasses.
SPRAYUP
Process in which glass fibres, resin and catalyst are simultaneously deposited in mould. Roving is fed through chopper and ejected into resin stream directed at mould. Catalyst and accelerated resin may be sprayed from one or two guns., Glass resin mix is then rolled by hand before curing.
STIFFNESS
Structural property that describes relationship between forces and moments applied to and stretching and bending deflections experienced by any item.
STRESS CORROSION
Preferential attack of areas under stress in corrosive environment, where such an environment alone would not have caused corrosion.
STRESS CRACK
External or internal cracks in composite caused by tensile stresses; cracking may be present internally, externally or in combination.
STYRENE MONOMER
Unsaturated aromatic hydrocarbon, used in plastics. In polyester, a reactive diluent.
SUBSTRATE
Material on which adhesive-containing substance is spread for any purpose, (e.g.: bonding o coating).
SURFACING AGENT
Material (commonly paraffin wax) that allows surface of polyesters to cure; limits adhesion of another coat of resin if first is thoroughly cured. May be removed by sanding or rubbing with steel wool.
SURFACING VEIL
Used with other reinforcing mats and fabrics to enhance quality of surface finish. Designed to block out fibre patterns of underlying reinforcements; also called “surfacing mat”.
SYMMETRIC
Laminate design term used with composites to indicate that laminate is symmetric about the lane, midway through its thickness.
TBPB
Abbreviation for tertiary-butyl perbenzoate used as catalyst in high speed, heated cures of polyester resin systems.
TBPO
Abbreviation for tertiary-butyl peroctoate used as catalyst in high speed, heated cures of polyester resin systems.
TENSILE ELONGATION
An engineering term referring to the amount of stretch a sample experiences during tensile strain. ASTM D-638.
TENSILE STRENGTH
Maximum stress sustained by composite specimen before it fails in tension test. ASTM D-638.
TEXTILE
Any type of sheet material made from fibres that are woven, knitted, knotted, stitched or bonded together.
THERMAL STRESS
Occurs when change in temperature causes materials to expand and contract at different rates. Can form within and between layers of laminate as well as between laminate and steel frame.
THERMAL STRESS CRACKING
Crazing or cracking of some thermoset or thermoplastic resins from over-exposure to elevated temperatures or cyclic temperature variations.
THERMOPLASTICS
Polymers that can be repeatedly softened when heated, hardened when cooled. Thermoplastics such as polymers and copolymers of acrylics, PET, polycarbonates, nylons, fluorocarbons and styrene are fast becoming important engineering materials.
THERMOSETS
Materials that will undergo or have undergone chemical reaction, leading to relatively infusible state. Typical materials are aminos (melamine and urea), unsaturated polyesters, alkyds, epoxies and phenolics; not reformable.
THIXOTROPIC
Condition in which material possesses resistance to flow until it is agitated (mixed, pumped, or sprayed).
THIXOTROPIC INDEX (TI)
Indication of sag resistance determined by dividing low shear viscosity by high shear viscosity.
TOOL
Mould, either one or two-sided, and either open or closed, in or upon which composite material is placed to make part, also “mould”.
UNDERCUT
An area of a part or mould that has acute angle between two surfaces. If a part has an undercut, a split mould is necessary.
UNDIRECTIONAL
Refers to fibres oriented in the same direction, such as unidirectional fabric, tape or laminate; often called UD.
VACUUM BAG MOLDING
moulding process for minimising emissions voids and maximising reinforcement content, forcing out entrapped air and excess resin from layups, by drawing vacuum into flexible film draped over part. Also considered “Resin Infusion”. Vacuum may be drawn after resin entry.
VACUUM INFUSION PROCESSING
A process where the reinforcement is laid-up in the mould dry, then vacuum bagged and the resin is pulled into the mould at lower than atmospheric pressure.
VACUUM-ASSISTED RESIN TRANSFER MOLDING (VAR-TM)
Infusion process where vacuum draws resin into one-sided mould; cover, either rigid or flexible, is placed over top to form vacuum-tight seal.
VEIL
Tissue of fibres which drapes and wets easily; of value to provide resin-rich barrier to corrosion or glass print, as in surfacing veil.
VOIDS
Laminate defect that occurs during moulding process; characterised by lack of resin material (entrapped air, un-wetted fibres).
VOLATILE MATERIAL
Material vaporizing under specific conditions short of decomposition; non-volatile material remains.
VOLATILE ORGANIC COMPOUNDS (VOC)
Carbon containing chemical compounds (e.g.: solvents or liquids) that evaporate readily at ambient or process temperatures. Environmental, safety and health regulations often limit exposure to these compounds, so low VC content is preferable.
WEAVE
Pattern by which fabric is formed from interlacing yarns. In plain weave, warp and fill fibres alternate to make both fabric faces identical. In satin weave, pattern produces satin appearance with warp roving crossing over several fill rovings and under next one (e.g.: eight-harness satin would have warp roving over seven fill rovings and under eighth).
WEAVE PRINT
Extreme form of fibre print resembling architecture of woven or stitched glass ply just below or near gel coat surface.
WET WINDING
Filament winding wherein fibre strands are impregnated with resin immediately before they contact mandrel.
WET-OUT
The action of saturating a glass fabric with resin. Also, a measure of the speed that a fabric soaks up resin.
WINDING PATTERN
Regularly recurring pattern of filament path in filament winding after certain number of mandrel revolutions.
WIRE MESH
Fine wire screen used to increase electrical conductivity. Typically used to dissipate electrical charge from lightning or electromagnetic interference.
WITNESS MARK
Defect in gel coat surface profile that corresponds to some feature, either in underlying laminate or on/in moulding surface; sometimes called mark-off.
WOVEN ROVING FABRIC
Heavy fabrics woven from continuous filaments n roving form. They drape well, are quickly impregnated, are intermediate in price between mats and yarn cloths, and contribute to higher glass content.
WRINKLE
Imperfection in surface of laminate that appears to be a crease in one of the outer layers; occurs in vacuum-bag moulding when bag is improperly placed.