NZ720293B2 - Fiber winding system for composite projectile barrel structure - Google Patents
Fiber winding system for composite projectile barrel structure Download PDFInfo
- Publication number
- NZ720293B2 NZ720293B2 NZ720293A NZ72029314A NZ720293B2 NZ 720293 B2 NZ720293 B2 NZ 720293B2 NZ 720293 A NZ720293 A NZ 720293A NZ 72029314 A NZ72029314 A NZ 72029314A NZ 720293 B2 NZ720293 B2 NZ 720293B2
- Authority
- NZ
- New Zealand
- Prior art keywords
- barrel
- inner liner
- outer shell
- cfc
- cte
- Prior art date
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- 229920000647 polyepoxide Polymers 0.000 abstract description 5
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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
- B32B15/00—Layered products comprising a layer of metal
- B32B15/14—Layered products comprising a layer of metal next to a fibrous or filamentary layer
-
- F—MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
- F41—WEAPONS
- F41A—FUNCTIONAL FEATURES OR DETAILS COMMON TO BOTH SMALLARMS AND ORDNANCE, e.g. CANNONS; MOUNTINGS FOR SMALLARMS OR ORDNANCE
- F41A21/00—Barrels; Gun tubes; Muzzle attachments; Barrel mounting means
- F41A21/02—Composite barrels, i.e. barrels having multiple layers, e.g. of different materials
-
- F—MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
- F41—WEAPONS
- F41A—FUNCTIONAL FEATURES OR DETAILS COMMON TO BOTH SMALLARMS AND ORDNANCE, e.g. CANNONS; MOUNTINGS FOR SMALLARMS OR ORDNANCE
- F41A21/00—Barrels; Gun tubes; Muzzle attachments; Barrel mounting means
- F41A21/02—Composite barrels, i.e. barrels having multiple layers, e.g. of different materials
- F41A21/04—Barrel liners
-
- F—MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
- F41—WEAPONS
- F41A—FUNCTIONAL FEATURES OR DETAILS COMMON TO BOTH SMALLARMS AND ORDNANCE, e.g. CANNONS; MOUNTINGS FOR SMALLARMS OR ORDNANCE
- F41A21/00—Barrels; Gun tubes; Muzzle attachments; Barrel mounting means
- F41A21/20—Barrels or gun tubes characterised by the material
Abstract
composite projectile barrel is disclosed comprising a continuous fiber composite outer shell whose average effective coefficient of thermal expansion in the longitudinal direction approximately matches that of an inner liner. In one embodiment, the composite barrel comprises PAN precursor carbon fiber and a thermoset epoxy resin, with the carbon fiber wound at varying winding angles to form a plurality of regions within the outer shell. The finished barrel exhibits light weight, superior axial stiffness and strength, durability, and is reliably accurate. iber and a thermoset epoxy resin, with the carbon fiber wound at varying winding angles to form a plurality of regions within the outer shell. The finished barrel exhibits light weight, superior axial stiffness and strength, durability, and is reliably accurate.
Description
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FIBER WINDING SYSTEM FOR COMPOSITE PROJECTILE BARREL STRUCTURE
CROSS REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS
This application claims priority to Provisional Patent Application: No. 61/913,825 filed
December 9, 2013. The entire disclosure of that provisional application is hereby incorporated
by reference and relied upon.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
Users have long desired lighter weight gun systems that remain durable and reliably
accurate. It is known to substitute relatively strong but lightweight materials – such as
unreinforced and reinforced polymers, continuous glass fiber or carbon fiber composites – for
various portions of the gun commonly fabricated from steel, aluminum, or other metals.
Attention has focused on gun barrels, which constitute a large percentage of a gun’s weight. It is
known, for example, to fabricate a gun barrel having an inner liner, typically a steel alloy,
surrounded by a continuous carbon fiber reinforced polymer matrix composite outer shell. With
the appropriate choice of materials and properly engineered, this combination lightens the gun
while retaining good barrel strength and stiffness.
The carbon fibers used in the outer shell may be any types that provide the desired
stiffness, strength and thermal conductivity. Typically for gun barrel applications,
polyacrylonitrile (“PAN”) precursor or pitch precursor carbon fibers are used. The carbon fiber
may be applied in a wet filament winding operation, wherein dry carbon fiber strands or tows are
combined with a resin in a “wet” dip pan process, then wound around the inner liner and
processed. Alternatively, the shell may be fabricated from carbon fiber tow, unidirectional tape,
or fabric that was previously impregnated with resin in a separate process (“towpreg” or
“prepreg”), or a textile preform wherein the resin is infused into the braided preform, then
applied to the inner liner in a process that cures the prepreg into a hard thermally stable matrix
and simultaneously bonds the outer shell to the barrel inner liner. Whether applied by wet
filament winding, resin infusion into a dry preform, or by application of prepreg materials, the
matrix resin is typically a crosslinkable epoxy, but the resin may be a polymer such as a
polyimide, bismaleimide, cyanate ester, inorganic polymer, thermoplastic polymer, or some
other material as the inventors described in patent application PCT/US14/53194 (Curliss), the
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specification and drawings of which are hereby incorporated in their entirety. The matrix binder
may not be an organic polymer resin at all, but may be an inorganic polymer, a metal, a ceramic,
allotropes of carbon, or a mineral. The composite barrel may then be cured (where relevant),
finished, and attached to a receiver and stock. Such carbon fiber reinforced composites can
provide a suitable balance of thermal properties, mechanical properties, and processing
characteristics for many common firearms applications. Other fibers known to those skilled in
the art, including continuous glass fibers, continuous ceramic fibers, continuous metallic fibers,
continuous graphite fibers, continuous mineral fibers, continuous polymer fibers and/or
combinations thereof may also be used as the reinforcement phase.
Such composite gun barrels, however, can pose problems not encountered with
traditional steel barrels. First, the composite must be constructed in a manner and quantity
around and along the liner to ensure that the barrel does not burst upon firing, to achieve
satisfactory strength and stiffness in the principal directions (e.g., axially and torsionally), to
provide adequate environmental durability, and to dampen the shock wave that propagates when
the projectile is fired. For example, dampening of the shock wave through reflection, refraction,
and interaction in inhomogeneous materials will vary depending on material properties, such as
fiber diameter and geometric orientation, and volume fraction of the continuous fibers within the
matrix.
Most of the foregoing issues can be addressed by additional windings, e.g., more
circumferential “hoop wraps” to improve burst strength and more axially oriented helical
windings to improve axial tensile and flexural strength and stiffness. Torsional stiffness is a
significant design factor important in medium and large caliber barrels having rifling. However,
adding more layers of windings can lead to manufacturing and curing complications, higher
material expense, more weight, and a bulkier barrel profile than desired. Fiber selection can also
address these problems to some extent. Generally lower density, stronger and stiffer fibers are
preferred provided they do not exhibit other undesirable characteristics, such as poor resin
adhesion.
Second, thermal management is a significant concern, inasmuch as the more common
continuous fiber composite (“CFC”) outer shells are relatively poor conductors of the heat
generated by hot gasses within the liner. Additional layers of CFC windings exacerbate the heat
removal problem. During operation, the barrel will heat up. In the case where the matrix phase is
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an organic polymer, if the cured resin within the CFC reaches its glass transition temperature, T ,
the CFC softens significantly and the mechanical integrity of the composite barrel is compromised.
As the barrel is heated to even higher temperatures, irreversible thermal decomposition of the cured
matrix occurs and barrel structural integrity is further compromised. U.S. 6,889,464 (Degerness)
added a thermally conductive material to the resin mixture to improve thermal conductivity and
heat dissipation. Curliss, supra, (PCT/US14/53194) disclosed a novel method for manufacturing
gun barrels using resins that withstand higher temperatures, and disclosed using small particles of
metal such as aluminum as a thermal conducting additive.
A third problem relates to stresses within the barrel arising from thermal expansion
differences between the composite and the inner liner of the composite barrel. As the inner steel
liner heats during operation, it expands both radially and longitudinally. Composite structures in
the prior art have a substantially lower average effective coefficient of thermal expansion (CTE)
in the longitudinal direction than steel and so when heated, the CFC outer shell expands
substantially less than the steel liner. This may increase or decrease thermal stresses in the barrel
depending on the state of thermal residual stress from processing. The point is that as the
temperature changes in the barrel, due to operation or the environment, the state of residual stress
in the barrel also changes. For example, the CTE of type 416 grade stainless steel, an alloy
commonly employed in steel gun barrels, is about 5.55 parts per million per degree Fahrenheit
-6 -5
(5.55 ppm/ºF, or 5.55 × 10
/ºF) (10 ppm/ºC or 1× 10 /ºC ), while the longitudinal average effective
CTE for a typical CFC outer shell employing PAN precursor carbon fiber and a thermoset epoxy
resin is less than about 3 ppm/ ºF (5.4 ppm/ºC). When a type 416 stainless steel liner and a typical
CFC are subjected to heating during operation, uneven expansion can produce thermal stresses on
the liner-CFC interface, possibly even causing separation of the CFC from portions of the liner or
fractures within the CFC shell. Even if no separation occurs, minor variations in the CFC or metal
liner properties, or geometric variation, may promote uneven thermal stresses at the interface
between the barrel and CFC that may result in nonlinear deformation or displacement of the barrel
from its original axis. Even a very slight displacement can significantly degrade accuracy.
Moreover, even if the barrel and liner remain perfectly true, the various layers of windings within
the CFC can have different CTEs, especially longitudinally. When subjected to elevated operating
temperatures, differences in the thermal expansion of adjacent winding layers within the CFC can
result in high levels of interlaminar shear stress and even delamination.
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US 5,692,334 (Christensen) disclosed eliminating any bond or adhesion between the
inner liner and the CFC. Unfortunately, this approach virtually eliminates any contribution of the
outer shell to axial stiffness, torsional stiffness, or circumferential reinforcement. The same
inventor in US 5,804,756 recognized that steel and the composite shell have different CTEs, but
attempted to match thermal expansion only in the radial direction. Indeed, one object of the ‘756
patent is to “have nearly 0 coefficient of thermal expansion in the axial direction.” The ‘756 patent
expressly teaches that reducing the CFC’s expansion to zero in the axial direction improves
accuracy. ‘756 patent col. 2, line 23; col. 6 line 11.
US 5,600,912 (Smith) teaches mechanical compression of the carbon fiber composite
outer shell longitudinally after it is cured to improve barrel stiffness, which compression could
also help compensate for a lower CFC thermal expansion when the barrel is heated during
operation. However, mechanically compressing the CFC risks damage e.g., through over
tightening, and in any case the “proper” amount of cold residual compression to apply will vary
depending on the barrel’s operating temperature as well as structural characteristics such as barrel
length and liner profile. Like Smith, US 6,189,431 (Danner) also mechanically exerts residual
cold compression on the CFC, but it is accomplished by means of steel flanges on the liner ends
which compress the CFC as the steel liner contracts more than the CFC during the cooling phase
of the curing process. Like Smith, Danner does not address the underlying problem of mismatched
CTEs, and seems to accept as a given that a steel liner inherently has a higher CTE than a
continuous fiber composite. Moreover, Danner continues the prior art of abruptly alternating
winding angles between layers.
Producing an optimized composite barrel must balance competing considerations. What
is needed is a carbon fiber composite projectile barrel that employs reasonably priced materials,
that provides superior axial and torsional strength and stiffness while minimizing weight and radial
bulk, that minimizes interlaminar stress, and that does not deform when heated due to mismatched
axial CTEs between the liner and outer shell.
BRIEF SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
A composite projectile barrel is disclosed comprising a novel continuous fiber composite
outer shell that offers superior axial and torsional strength and stiffness, minimizes weight and
radial bulk, and does not distort when heated due to mismatched axial CTEs between the inner
liner and CFC outer shell. In one embodiment, the invention comprises a barrel for directing the
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path of a dischargeable projectile including an inner liner defining an axial bore and having a
coefficient of thermal expansion, and a CFC outer shell surrounding and in direct contact with the
inner liner, wherein the average effective axial CTE of the CFC is approximately equal to the axial
CTE of the inner liner.
It is to be understood that the invention may be practiced with projectile barrels of
virtually any length, contour or caliber with comparable effectiveness, and on other structures
where fiber is combined with a resin and wound or otherwise constructed around along an
elongated axis. For example, the invention is equally suitable to short handgun pistol barrels, small
caliber sporting guns and military weapons, as well as medium and large caliber military weapons
barrels such as barrels for the 25mm M242 Bushmaster, or the M256A1 120mm smooth bore main
gun of the Abrams M1A2 tank.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE SEVERAL VIEWS OF THE DRAWINGS
These and other features and advantages of the present invention will become more
readily appreciated when considered in connection with the following detailed description and
appended drawings, wherein:
Figure 1 illustrates a rifle fitted with a composite barrel;
Figure 1A is a cut-away of a portion of the composite barrel shown in Fig. 1;
Figure 2 illustrates a resin tow winding system;
Figure 3 illustrates a dry towpreg winding system;
Figure 4 is a side view showing a section of the inner liner being wrapped at a
substantially constant wrapping angle;
Figure 5 is a chart showing the relationship between CFC wrap angle, angle effect on
axial stiffness, and angle effect on axial CTE;
Figure 6 is an end view of an exemplar composite barrel showing radial thickness of
composite regions; and
Figure 7 is a section of the cut-away illustration showing an embodiment of a
composite barrel.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
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Referring to the figures, wherein like numerals indicate like or corresponding parts
throughout the several views, Figure 1 shows a bolt action rifle 10 fitted with a receiver 12,
stock, trigger, barrel 14, and other familiar features. In the embodiment shown, barrel 14
securely engages with receiver 12 by means of threads 16. In operation, a cartridge of
ammunition is inserted into the receiver. The cartridge has a base portion containing a
gunpowder charge and dischargeable projectile, i.e., a bullet. When a shooter pulls the trigger, a
firing pin strikes the base of the cartridge, igniting the gunpowder charge and causing the bullet
to discharge through axial bore 24 and out of the muzzle 18.
As shown in Fig. 1A, barrel 14 is comprised of an inner liner 22 and an outer shell 20.
The liner may be fabricated from any metal or refractory material commonly used and known to
be useful for firearms barrels or a combination of the foregoing. A steel alloy inner liner 22,
such as AISI type 416 stainless steel, has good machining properties, facilitating precisely boring
and rifling lands and grooves along axial bore 24 as well as threads at the muzzle and/or breech
ends of the barrel. Other steel alloys, including other alloys in AISI classes 400 and 4000, have
demonstrated good performance as gun barrel inner liners. Outer shell 20 is a continuous fiber
composite (CFC). For purposes of the specification and claims, “CFC” means a composite
comprised of continuous fibers such as continuous PAN and pitch carbon fibers, continuous
glass fibers, continuous ceramic fibers, continuous metallic fibers, continuous graphite fibers,
continuous mineral fibers, continuous polymer fibers, and combinations thereof; and a matrix
binder material such as an organic polymer, an inorganic polymer, a metal, a ceramic, allotropes
of carbon, or a mineral. Inner liner 22 need not be uniformly cylindrical. For example, inner
liner 22 may radially expand at the breech end to accommodate cutting of threads 16 for
insertion into receiver 12, taper outwards at the muzzle 18, or include other configurations such
as a gas block journal depending on desired features of the gun. Outer shell 20 likewise may
include non-cylindrical features or be discontinuous over the length of barrel 14.
Outer shell 20 is in direct contact with inner liner 22 at interface 26. It may be
desirable to promote adhesion or to inhibit corrosion between the inner liner 22 and CFC outer
shell 20 at interface 26. For purposes of this specification and the claims, “direct contact” means
that the outer surface of inner liner 22 at interface 26 may include a surface treatment that is
applied before outer shell 20 is fabricated upon inner liner 22. For example, a CFC outer shell
is in “direct contact” with a steel inner liner 22 at interface 26 even if the steel liner’s surface
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is electroplated, anodized, or coated with a chemical compound or mixture, such as paint, resin,
hot glass, or other substance.
Figure 2 shows a simplified tow winding system 30 useful for fabricating a composite
gun barrel 14 having a CFC outer shell 20. In one embodiment, outer shell 20 comprises
continuous fiber filament, or tow, 34, supplied from tow spool 32. In another embodiment (not
shown) the fiber could be in the form of fabric or a weave. Carbon fibers are typically
advantageous to use for CFC gun barrels due to their high stiffness, high strength, and low
density. The term “carbon fiber” is used to generically describe carbon and graphite fibers
irrespective of their manufacturing process or precursor materials, and specifically includes both
PAN precursor and pitch precursor carbon fibers. The term “continuous” fiber, as known to
those in the art, differentiates such essentially endless fiber from discontinuous fibers, e.g.
chopped or ground carbon fibers. In one embodiment, tow 34 is an intermediate modulus PAN
carbon fiber filament tow, such as HexTow IM2A available from Hexcel Corporation, Stamford
Connecticut. IM2A has a modulus of 40 Msi (276 GPa). For purposes of this specification and
claims, “intermediate modulus” means a modulus of elasticity between approximately 38 and 46
Msi (about 265-320 GPa). However, tow 34 could also be a pitch carbon fiber, such as
GRANOC CNA2S, available from Nippon Graphite Fiber Corporation, Tokyo, Japan, or any
suitable fiber for manufacturing composites including Kevlar, glass, quartz, ceramic, mineral,
carbon, metallic, graphite, or hybridizations of fibers formed by combining different types of
fibers to gain characteristics not attainable with a single reinforcing fiber.
Tow 34 is drawn from tow spool 32 under tension by rotating inner liner 22 which
functions as a mandrel. Inner liner 22 is placed between chucks 47 and rotates about axial bore
24. The rotating inner liner 22 tugs tow 34 through a resin mixture 36, dipping around a series of
rollers 38 immersed in resin bath 35, with the rollers 38 helping to press resin mixture 36 into
tow 34. Those skilled in the art will appreciate that there are multiple ways of applying resin to
the tow. In another embodiment (not shown), tow 34 could be drawn across the upper surface of
a semi-immersed rotating drum wetted with resin.
Brisk movement of tow 34 through resin mixture 36 and around rollers 38 creates
currents and turbulence helping to maintain resin solids and other particulates in suspension
within resin mixture 36. Optionally, an agitator (not shown) placed in resin bath 35 may be
utilized to facilitate uniform mix and viscosity of the resin, solvent, and any added particulates or
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other thermally conductive materials added as solids to the resin mixture 36. The agitator may
be a mechanical paddle driven by a motor, a resin mixture recirculation system driven by a
pump, an ultrasonic agitator, or other means for maintaining solids and particulates in
suspension.
After the filament is impregnated with the resin mixture 36, excess resin mixture is
removed from the tow. Excess resin mixture may be removed from the tow by means of nip
rollers 40 having an appropriate gap setting, scrapers (not shown), appropriately-sized dies (not
shown) and/or other means known in the art, individually or in combination.
Resin infused tow 42 exits resin bath 35 and is drawn through a filament guide
orifice 46 controlled by filament guide structure 44. Optionally, one or more heating elements
48 may flash off first stage volatiles present in resin mixture 36 after the resin infused tow 42
exits resin bath 35 by means of a heat unit 48. The heating units cause volatilization of some or
even most of any solvent that is present on resin infused tow 42. The heating elements 48 may
be placed anywhere on the path of resin infused tow 42, including heating the mandrel inner liner
22 itself. The heating elements may be radiant heaters, tube furnace/heaters, convection heaters,
or other means of heating resin infused tow 42, including various types of heating elements in
combination.
After the excess resin mixture 36 is mechanically removed and optionally
subjected to heating, resin infused tow 42 is wound around the inner barrel in the desired helical
pattern and to a desired diameter. Filament guide structure 44 includes a mechanism for laterally
translating filament guide orifice 46 generally parallel to axial bore 24, thereby guiding resin
infused tow 42 back and forth along rotating inner liner 22, so that resin infused tow 42 is
applied to inner liner in a helical winding pattern. Filament guide orifice 46 itself may also
rotate or translate relative to filament guide structure 44.
It will be appreciated that if inner liner 22 rotates at a constant rate, faster lateral
movement of filament guiding structure 44 will result in a helical winding pattern of resin
infused tow 42 characterized by smaller winding angles relative to axial bore 24. At a brisk
lateral speed, the helical winding angle of resin infused tow will be small, nearly longitudinal
relative to axial bore 24. Conversely, slower lateral movement of filament guiding structure 44
will result in larger helical winding angles relative to axial bore 24. At very slow lateral speeds,
winding angles of resin infused tow 42 may be nearly circumferential hoops, almost 90 degrees.
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For purposes of the claims and this specification, such nearly circumferential hoops are
nevertheless “helical.” Tow winding system 30 may be controlled by a computer processor, so
that rotation speed of the inner liner 22, lateral movement of the filament guide structure 44,
movements of filament guide orifice 46, tension applied to tow 34, and other aspects may be
programmed by a user to produce desired patterns and sequences of winding angles, number of
layers, and depths of the layers. Such systems are available from, for example, McLean
Anderson, 300 Ross Avenue, Schofield, Wisconsin 54476.
Resin mixture 36 may comprise a variety of thermoset or thermoplastic resins, including
but not limited to epoxy, bismaleimide, phenolic, and polyimide resins. In one embodiment, resin
mixture 36 comprises a thermoset epoxy resin. In another embodiment, resin mixture 36
comprises a polymerizable monomer reactant (PMR) type thermoset polyimide resin. Resin
mixture 36 may be heated or solvated to reduce viscosity and ensure satisfactory impregnation of
tow 34. Resin bath 35 may be configured to heat resin mixture 36 using techniques known to those
skilled in the art, such as circulating a hot fluid, such as water, through a jacket surrounding resin
bath 35, or applying heating elements to the bottom or sides of resin bath 35, or via a heating coil
immersed in resin mixture 36. Many solvents may be utilized to make the resin less viscous,
including alcohols such as methanol or ethanol, aprotic solvents, and mixtures thereof. The PMR
type thermoset polyimide resin will typically include an alcohol co-reactant that acts as a solvent.
A solvent having a lower boiling point (i.e., higher volatility) is generally more desirable because
it can be more easily flashed off the resin infused tow 42 with heating units such as a heat unit 48.
Returning to the composition of carbon fiber, tow 34 is comprised of carbon fiber strands
that are preferably collected into a flat tow. In one embodiment, the individual carbon fiber strands
are PAN precursor carbon fibers each having a diameter of approximately 7 μm (microns), and
each tow 34 comprises about 12,000 individual carbon fiber strands. In one embodiment, tow 34
is Hextow IM2A carbon fiber filament available from Hexcel Corporation. IM2A is an aerospace
grade PAN carbon fiber having an intermediate modulus of elasticity. This PAN carbon fiber
exhibits good strength and stiffness, good heat conductivity, yet its cost is affordable for
commercial manufacturing purposes.
It should be understood that the completed outer shell 20 could comprise more than one
type of carbon fiber. One might simultaneously wind a plurality of tows having different
characteristics, e.g., two carbon fiber tow strands having complementary characteristics such as
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PAN and pitch, or that the type of fiber in tow 34 could be changed as the outer shell 20 is being
wound, such as using PAN fiber for hoops then switching to pitch fiber tows for some or all of the
longitudinal-oriented windings, without altering the intended meaning of the claimed invention.
Similarly, even though the manufacturing method recited in the claims recites “the fiber tow,” it
is intended that one might use a plurality of tows within the outer shell 20 without departing from
the scope of the claimed invention, for example utilizing a different fiber type depending on region,
or combining a plurality of tows.
To increase the burst strength of the barrel, it is known to be advantageous to wind tows
34 circumferentially about inner liner 22 in helical hoops, e.g. ±85° (plus or minus about 5°
relative to the longitudinal axis of the barrel). For axial strength and stiffness, to minimize barrel
14 from flexing due to shockwaves arising from discharge of a bullet for example, it is preferable
to have more longitudinal helical wraps, e.g. ±25° (again plus or minus about 5° measured relative
to the longitudinal axis of barrel 14). To promote maximum axial stiffness with the fewest tows,
it is preferable to locate the longitudinal helical wraps at or near the outer region of outer shell 20.
The surface of outer shell 20 can be made more durable to wear and tear, however, if the outer
region of outer shell 20 is wrapped at a less acute angle, e.g. 45°.
Unless the context dictates otherwise, reference in the specification and claims to
“winding angle” or “wrap angle” includes the positive and negative measured fiber angles relative
to the barrel’s longitudinal axis. This is illustrated in Figure 4, which shows a section of inner
liner 22 in the initial stage of being wrapped with tow 34. (In practice, tow 34 typically has a wide,
flat profile. Its profile is “fattened” in Figure 4 to better illustrate tow placement.) Tow 34 is
helically wrapped around inner liner 22 as filament guide 44 translates laterally relative to rotating
inner liner 22. The first lateral pass (left to right) winds a first tow segment 64. When filament
guide 44 completes its translation and reaches the end of inner liner 22, it reverses and helically
winds the tow in the opposite direction, laying down second tow segment 65. The next pass winds
third tow segment 66, and the next pass winds fourth tow segment 67. The winding angle for all
four segments in Figure 4 is the same, albeit the angles alternate between positive and negative
with each pass, measured relative to axial bore 24. For purposes of the claims and specification,
angle θ shown in Figure 4 with respect to first tow segment 64 is the “same wrapping angle” as θ´
shown in Figure 4 with respect to fourth tow segment 67. In other words, the wrapping angle
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shown in Figure 4 is constant. Reference in the specification and the claims to “helical” means
substantially helical, e.g., portions of inner liner 22 may not be strictly cylindrical.
As noted, axial stiffness varies with the wrap angle of tow 34. Figure 5 shows stiffness
numbers calculated under classical laminate theory assuming an intermediate modulus PAN
carbon fiber at 60% fiber volume fraction in a polymer resin matrix composite. The first data on
the chart shows the effect of wrap angle on the stiffness of the outer shell in the axial direction,
measured as millions of pounds per square inch (Msi). At zero degrees relative to the barrel’s axis
(i.e., parallel to axial bore 24) the elastic modulus E is nearly 24 Msi, which approaches type AISI
416 stainless steel (UNS S41600) which has E of 29 Msi. As the winding angle relative to the
barrel’s axis increases, stiffness drops sharply. At a winding angle of ±45º, E falls to about 2.4
Msi. For near-perpendicular “hoop” windings, their contribution to axial stiffness is small, falling
to under 2 Msi.
Figure 5 also shows the effect of winding angle on linear CTE through the CFC. Lower
winding angles (i.e., more axially aligned) have much lower CTE α. Near-perpendicular wrap
angles (hoops) have relatively high longitudinal CTE, about 15 ppm/ºF (27 ppm/ºC). The CTE of
inner liner 22 may vary considerably depending on composition. For example, a ceramic or
ceramic composite inner liner may have a CTE that is considerably less than steel. AISI 4140 steel
has a CTE of approximately 6.8 ppm/ºF (12.2 ppm/ºC). As mentioned previously, AISI 416
stainless steel has a CTE of approximately 5.55 ppm/ºF (10ppm/ºC). Referring to Figure 5, if the
entire outer shell 20 could be wrapped at a constant angle of about 48º, the average effective
longitudinal CTEs of outer shell 20 and a type 416 stainless steel inner liner 22 would
approximately match, theoretically solving many of the problems arising from mismatched CTEs.
However, it is not practical to wrap the entire outer shell 20 at that angle, at least partly because a
uniform 48º wrap would not provide sufficient axial stiffness or burst strength without excessive
windings.
The average effective longitudinal CTE of the CFC outer shell 20 will vary depending
not only on wrap angle, but on a variety of other factors including matrix composition (e.g.,
whether resin versus ceramic or metal, type of resin, etc.), presence of matrix additives such as
thermally conductive heat dissipation additives, fiber type, tow tension during wrapping, regional
wrap angle sequence, and regional wrap angle thicknesses. All of these factors must be considered
when attempting to match the average effective longitudinal CTE of the CFC outer shell to the
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CTE of the steel liner. It is possible to design and fabricate a CFC outer shell having a desired
average effective longitudinal CTE fabricated from materials other than unidirectional carbon fiber
continuous tows, including for example textile composite prepreg carbon fiber, and carbon fiber
braided sleeves. Noncarbon materials may also be used, such as ceramic, glass, mineral, polymer
or metallic fibers, or mixtures thereof.
More specifically, the inventors have discovered that it is possible to match the average
effective axial CTE of a CFC outer shell 20 to the CTE an inner liner 22 by using a plurality of
wrapping regions, while also providing excellent axial, radial, and torsional strength and stiffness,
yet keeping bulk and weight at a minimum. Using known CTE data and wrapping techniques
familiar to those skilled in the art of fiber laminates, e.g. the relationships illustrated in Figure 5,
it is possible to engineer a laminate CFC outer shell 20 having good structural properties and a
desired average effective CTE by wrapping a plurality of regions, each region having substantially
the same winding angle and each having a radial thickness relative to the radial thickness of the
CFC.
Referring to Figures 1A and 6, CFC outer shell 20 surrounds and is in direct contact with
inner liner 22. For purposes of the claims and this specification, “surrounding the inner liner”
means that outer shell 20 surrounds and is in direct contact with inner liner 22 along at least a
portion of the axial length of barrel 14; parts of inner liner 22 may be exposed, for example, at
muzzle 18, threads 16, a gas block (not shown), or any other desired location(s) on barrel 14. Outer
shell 20 is structured in successive regions, with each region having substantially the same winding
angle. The radial thickness of each region as a percentage of the CFC radius varies. In the
exemplar embodiment shown in Figure 6, inner liner 22 has a radial depth r , inner region 50 has
a radial depth r , first intermediate region 52 has a radial depth r , second intermediate region 54
has radial depth r , and outer region 56 has radial depth r . The sum of radial thicknesses of the
regions in CFC outer shell 20 (r + r + r + r ) equal the radial thickness of CFC outer shell 20.
1 2 3 4
Thus the thickness of each region can be expressed as a percentage of the radial thickness of outer
shell 20.
Known classical laminate theory may be used to engineer a CFC outer shell 20 having a
wide range of average effective longitudinal CTEs using a plurality of layered wrapping regions.
The average effective CTE of the composite outer shell 20 is adjusted by varying the wrap angles
of the plurality of regions, the regions’ radial thicknesses, and the number and sequence of regions.
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The CTE may also be varied by changing the composition of resin/binder, the type of fiber, and
the tension at which fiber tow 34 is wrapped on liner 22. For example, one embodiment that
approximately matches the CTE of type 416 stainless steel inner liner 22 with the CTE of CFC
outer shell 20 comprises intermediate modulus PAN precursor carbon fibers and thermoset epoxy
resin. This embodiment not only virtually eliminates thermal stresses due to CTE mismatch that
can lead to deformation and displacement, but also provides superior performance, durability, with
relatively low bulk and weight, at a commercially viable price for materials. “Approximately
matches” for purposes of this specification and the claims means that the inner liner’s longitudinal
CTE is within 1 ppm/ ºF (1.8 ppm/ºC) of the average effective longitudinal CTE associated with
the CFC outer shell.
In addition to matching the average effective longitudinal CTE of outer shell 20 with
inner liner 22, a superior barrel design also exhibits high axial strength and stiffness, low
interlaminar shear stress during operation, and high hoop strength. Low angle plies (e.g., ±25°)
provide more axial stiffness than higher angles. Moreover, the further away a given mass of
longitudinal plies is located from the steel liner, the greater its contribution to axial stiffness.
However, placing longitudinal low-angle plies on the outside of barrel 14 compromises durability,
because they are more likely to delaminate or suffer interlaminar failure, such as when rubbed
against a rough surface. Placing higher angle plies in the outer regions enhances durability.
Preferably, the outer shell 20 will have an axial stiffness of at least 5.5 Msi and a modulus in the
radial plane (the radial plane containing angle Ɛ on Figure 7) of at least 10 Msi. Torsional strength
and stiffness become more critical factors in medium and large caliber firearm barrels where the
mass and diameter of the projectile become significant relative to the barrel outer diameter,
imparting significant torsional force on the barrel.
In one embodiment found to satisfactorily balance the foregoing considerations, a 12K
strand intermediate modulus PAN carbon fiber tow 34 is pulled through a wet epoxy thermoset
resin mixture 36 at about five pounds tension, while it is being wound on type 416 stainless steel
inner liner 22 rotating about its longitudinal axial bore 24. The resin mixture comprises 1.0%
Thermalgraph® chopped carbon fiber pitch by weight of the resin mixture. Tow 34 is helically
wound in a plurality of layered regions or “plies” extending radially outward from the liner surface,
comprising an inner region 50, a plurality of intermediate regions, and an outer region 56. The
tows within the inner region comprise circumferential hoops having a wrap angle of ±85° (all
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angles plus/minus about five degrees and measured relative to the barrel axis). At least one region
has longitudinal helical wrap angles ±25°. As discussed above, interlaminar shear stress may arise
between adjacent regions during operation because of heat, vibration, burst forces, and mismatched
CTEs between regions, potentially leading to undesirable forces within the outer shell 20 or
separation or delamination between adjacent regions. The inventors have determined that
interlaminar stress is manageable if the angle wrap differential between adjacent regions is limited
to less than 25°, and more preferably if the wrap angle differential is limited to approximately 20°.
In another embodiment, outer shell 20 comprises a plurality of layered regions, with an
inner region 50 comprised of near-perpendicular circumferential hoops of intermediate modulus
PAN precursor carbon fiber tow 34 wet-wrapped on inner liner 22 with a thermoset epoxy having
a winding angle of ±85°, then a first intermediate region 52 having a winding angle of ±75°, then
a second intermediate region 54 having a winding angle of ±65°, then a third intermediate region
of ±45°, a fourth intermediate region of longitudinal helical wraps of ±25°, a fifth intermediate
region of ±35°, and finally an outer region 56 having a wrap angle of ±45°. Any or all of these
angles could be altered by plus/minus 5º and still provide comparable performance with a Type
416 stainless steel inner liner. Moreover, as mentioned previously, other types of carbon fiber,
alone or in combination with PAN carbon fiber, could be used with similar results.
Figure 7 shows an exemplar barrel 14 produced by the winding system described,
comprising a CFC outer shell 20 progressively cut away to reveal a plurality of winding regions
created by winding resin infused tow 42 (or heated towpreg 43) around inner liner 22. In the
embodiment illustrated, each region has a substantially different helical wrapping angle. Inner
region 50 has a first wrapping angle 58, first intermediate region 52 has a second wrapping angle
60, and second intermediate region 54 has a third wrapping angle 62. Again, depending on the
average effective longitudinal CTE and other mechanical properties desired, the number of
regions may be any number, and the winding angles and depth of each layer may likewise vary.
The relative thickness of each region/ply affects the average effective CTE of the CFC
outer shell. In the embodiment discussed immediately above, the regions described above vary
significantly in radial thickness, expressed as a percentage of the radial distance from the surface
of the steel inner liner 22 to the exterior surface of the finished outer shell 20. In the embodiment
shown in Figure 7, the regions have thicknesses as noted below, where the angle measurements
are plus/minus 5°, and the percentage radial thickness are plus/minus 5%:
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region wrap thickness (% of CFC
angle radius)
inner ±85 40 (±5%)
1st intermediate ±75 7 (±5%)
2nd intermediate ±65 6 (±5%)
3d intermediate ±45 7 (±5%)
4th intermediate ±25 21 (±5%)
5th intermediate ±35 6 (±5%)
outer ±45 13 (±5%)
Following complete cure using techniques known in the art, barrel 14 is then ground
down to a desired diameter on a lathe, e.g. with diamond abrasives, then polished and finished as
is known to those skilled in the art. It may then be attached to a receiver and stock, to an armored
vehicle, fixed or portable shell launcher, etc.
The fiber and wrapping techniques described herein can be employed with a wide
variety of inner liner materials having various CTEs, including metals such as steel alloys as well
as refractory materials, ceramics, and inner liners comprising a combination of the foregoing
materials. The invention results in a lightweight, stiff, and strong barrel having greater burst
strength than the prior art, thereby enabling thinner and lighter barrel liners. The finished barrel
is durable, more resistant to laminar and interlaminar separation, and better withstands
unpredictable behavior such as warping and/or separation at the CFC-steel interface due to
matched CTEs.
The foregoing invention has been described in accordance with the relevant legal
standards, thus the description is exemplary rather than limiting in nature. Variations and
modifications to the disclosed embodiment may become apparent to those skilled in the art and
fall within the scope of the invention.
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Claims (38)
1. A barrel for directing the path of a dischargeable projectile, comprising: an inner liner defining an axial bore, the inner liner having a coefficient of thermal expansion (CTE) along the axial bore; and an outer shell surrounding and in direct contact with the inner liner, the outer shell fabricated from continuous fiber in a matrix creating a continuous fiber composite (CFC) and having an average effective CTE in the axial direction, wherein the average effective axial CTE of the outer shell is approximately equal to the axial CTE of the inner liner.
2. The barrel of claim 1 wherein the matrix comprises a polymer.
3. The barrel of claim 2 wherein the polymer is organic.
4. The barrel of claim 2 wherein the polymer is inorganic.
5. The barrel of claim 2 wherein the polymer is thermoplastic.
6. The barrel of claim 2 wherein the polymer is cured thermoset.
7. The barrel of claim 1 wherein the matrix comprises a metal.
8. The barrel of claim 1 wherein the matrix comprises a ceramic.
9. The barrel of claim 1 wherein the matrix comprises a mineral.
10. The barrel of claim 1 wherein the matrix comprises an allotrope of carbon.
11. The barrel of claim 2 wherein the CFC comprises a resin mixture having a thermally conductive additive.
12. The barrel of claim 1 wherein the inner liner comprises a ceramic material.
13. The barrel of claim 1 wherein the inner liner comprises a metal.
14. The barrel of claim 13 wherein the inner liner comprises a steel alloy.
15. The barrel of claim 14 wherein the steel alloy is stainless steel.
16. The barrel of claim 15 wherein the stainless steel is in AISI group 400.
17. The barrel of claim 16 wherein the average effective axial CTE of the outer shell is between 4.5 and 6.5 ppm/ºF (between 7.5 and 10.8 ppm/°C).
18. The barrel of claim 14 wherein the steel alloy is in AISI group 4000.
19. The barrel of claim 18 wherein the average effective axial CTE of the outer shell is between 5.8 and 7.8 ppm/ºF (between 9.7 and 13 ppm/°C). MARKED UP COPY
20. The barrel of claim 1 wherein the CFC comprises a plurality of layered regions of fibers, the fibers selected from the group consisting of: unidirectional tow, textile composite prepreg, and braided sleeve.
21. The barrel of claim 20 wherein the fibers are carbon.
22. The barrel of claim 20 wherein the fibers are ceramic.
23. The barrel of claim 20 wherein the fibers are glass.
24. The barrel of claim 20 wherein the fibers are metal.
25. The barrel of claim 20 wherein the fibers are mineral.
26. The barrel of claim 20 wherein the fibers are a polymer.
27. The barrel of claim 20 wherein each layered region comprises at least one unidirectional continuous carbon fiber tow helically wound around the inner liner at a substantially constant wind angle relative to the axial bore, and wherein each layered region has a radial thickness.
28. The barrel of claim 27 wherein at least one of said layered regions comprises PAN precursor carbon fibers.
29. The barrel of claim 28 wherein the PAN precursor fibers have a modulus of elasticity between approximately 38 and 46 Msi (about 265-320 GPa).
30. The barrel of claim 27 wherein at least one of said layered regions comprises pitch precursor carbon fibers.
31. The barrel of claim 27 wherein the wind angle between any two adjacent regions differs by less than 25°.
32. The barrel of claim 31 comprising: an inner region having a wind angle of ±85° and a radial thickness between 35% and 45% of the CFC radial thickness; a first intermediate region having a wind angle of ±75° and a radial thickness between 2% and 12% of the CFC radial thickness; a second intermediate region having a wind angle of ±65° and a radial thickness between 1% and 11% of the CFC radial thickness; a third intermediate region having a wind angle of ±45° and a radial thickness between 2% and 12% of the CFC radial thickness; MARKED UP COPY a fourth intermediate region having a wind angle of ±25° and a radial thickness between 16% and 26% of the CFC radial thickness; a fifth intermediate region having a wind angle of ±35° and a radial thickness between 1% and 11% of the CFC radial thickness; and an outer region having a wind angle of ±45° and a radial thickness between 8% and 18% of the CFC radial thickness.
33. A barrel for directing the path of a dischargeable projectile, comprising: a metal inner liner defining an axial bore and having an axial coefficient of thermal expansion (CTE), and a continuous fiber composite (CFC) outer shell surrounding and in direct contact with the inner liner, the outer shell having an average effective axial CTE within 1 ppm/ºF (1.8 ppm/ºC) of the inner liner’s CTE, said CFC comprising a plurality of layered regions, at least one region comprising a PAN precursor carbon fiber tow helically wound at a substantially constant winding angle relative to the axial bore, wherein the winding angle between any two adjacent regions differs by less than 25°.
34. The barrel of claim 33, wherein the PAN precursor carbon fiber tow comprises carbon fiber having a modulcus of elasticity between approximately 38 and 46 Msi (about 265-320 GPa).
35. A firearm comprising a receiver, a stock connected to the receiver, and a barrel connected to the receiver, wherein the barrel comprises: a metal inner liner defining an axial bore, the inner liner having an axial coefficient of thermal expansion (CTE); and an outer shell surrounding the inner liner, the outer shell fabricated from a continuous fiber composite (CFC), the outer shell having an average effective axial CTE approximately equal to the CTE of the inner liner.
36. A method of fabricating a barrel for directing the path of a dischargeable projectile, comprising the steps of: providing an inner liner defining an axial bore and having a coefficient of thermal expansion (CTE); fabricating a radially regionalized continuous fiber composite (CFC) outer shell around the inner liner, the outer shell having an average effective axial CTE, said fabrication comprising the steps MARKED UP COPY a. helically winding a fiber tow around the inner liner at a substantially constant first winding angle to form an inner region; b. helically winding the fiber tow around said inner region at a substantially constant second winding angle that differs substantially from the first winding angle to form a first intermediate region; c. helically winding the fiber tow around the previous intermediate region at a substantially constant winding angle that differs substantially from the winding angle characterizing the previous intermediate region; d. repeating step c as many times as desired until a final intermediate region is formed; e. forming an outer region by helically winding the fiber tow around the final intermediate region at a substantially constant winding angle that differs substantially from the winding angle characterizing the final intermediate region; wherein the winding angles in adjacent regions differ by less than 25º relative to the axial bore, and wherein the inner liner’s CTE is within 1 ppm/ ºF (within 1.8 ppm/°C) of the outer shell’s average effective axial CTE.
37. The method of claim 36 wherein the fiber tow comprises a PAN precursor carbon fiber.
38. The method of claim 36 wherein the inner liner is comprised of a stainless steel alloy.
Applications Claiming Priority (3)
| Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
|---|---|---|---|
| US201361913825P | 2013-12-09 | 2013-12-09 | |
| US61/913,825 | 2013-12-09 | ||
| PCT/US2014/069403 WO2015130379A2 (en) | 2013-12-09 | 2014-12-09 | Fiber winding system for composite projectile barrel structure |
Publications (2)
| Publication Number | Publication Date |
|---|---|
| NZ720293A NZ720293A (en) | 2020-09-25 |
| NZ720293B2 true NZ720293B2 (en) | 2021-01-06 |
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