Fuente:
Polymers
Polymers, Vol. 18, Pages 579: Thermal Performance of Medium and Long-Wave Infrared Emitters in PEEK-Based Thermoplastic Polymer Composites
Polymers doi: 10.3390/polym18050579
Authors:
Mehmet Emre Burulday
Nader Javani
Carbon Fiber Reinforced Thermoplastic Polymer (CFRTP) composites, particularly those utilizing Polyetheretherketone (PEEK) matrices, are becoming more demanding in the automotive and aerospace industries because of their outstanding strength, resilience to impact, and capacity for recycling. The employed heating methodology to prepare these materials is important both to improve them through uniform temperature distribution and to manage the energy consumption. The current study aims to address the encountered issues by experimentally comparing the radiative–thermal performance of medium-wave (1.4–2.5 µm) Quartz Tungsten (QTM) and long-wave (3.5–5.5 µm) Ceramic (FFEH) infrared emitters using a modular laboratory-scale heating system. While QTM emitters provided rapid heating rates, they induce significant through-thickness thermal gradients and surface degradation risks due to spectral mismatch with the polymer. In contrast, long-wave Ceramic emitters demonstrate superior spectral compatibility with PEEK, expanding the safe processing window and achieving complete melting at 343 °C with high thermal uniformity and approximately 18% lower effective energy demand compared to QTM systems. Furthermore, the structural integrity of the consolidated laminates has been validated through tensile testing, yielding an average tensile strength of 873 MPa and a tensile modulus of 56.3 GPa. These findings confirm the importance of optimizing the emitter wavelength not only for energy efficiency, but also for ensuring matrix integrity and mechanical performance in high-performance composite manufacturing.