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Micrographic studies on adhesively bonded scarf repairs to thick composite aircraft structure
Authors:B Whittingham  AA Baker  A Harman  D Bitton
Affiliation:aDepartment of Mechanical Engineering, Monash University, Clayton, Vic., Australia;bCooperative Research Centre for Advanced Composite Structures Ltd., Fishermans Bend, Vic., Australia;cDefence Science and Technology Organisation, Fishermans Bend, PO Box 4331, Vic. 3001, Australia
Abstract:The hard-patch approach to scarf repairs involves adhesively bonding a pre-formed patch into the scarf cavity. This approach has several potential advantages compared with the conventional soft-patch approach, which involves forming the patch from pre-preg and co-bonding it with the adhesive during cure of the patch directly in the repair cavity.Two methods for producing the hard-patch were investigated. The first was the moulded approach where the patch was laid up in a mould and cured prior to bonding in the repair cavity. The development and implementation of the moulded hard-patch repair technique on an F/A-18 horizontal stabiliser is described. The second approach involves machining the patch from a composite panel using digitised data obtained from the use of surface profiling equipment to capture the scarf cavity surface. Micrographic techniques were used to assess critical features of the bond-line produced from the different techniques. The results are compared with microscopic studies from a second F/A-18 horizontal stabiliser that was repaired much earlier using the soft-patch approach. Each repair is assessed in terms of the consolidation of plies along the bond-line and the conformity of the patch to the repair cavity as well as adhesive uniformity and porosity.
Keywords:A  Carbon Fibre Composites  C  Optical microscopy  E  Bonded repairs  Aircraft structure
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