Department of Mechanical Engineering2024-11-0920210021-998310.1177/00219983209631732-s2.0-85092501657http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0021998320963173https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14288/10231The main hurdles in Vacuum Infusion (VI) are the difficulty in achieving complete mold filling and uniform part thickness. This study integrates process monitoring by full field thickness measurements and resin flow modeling that accounts for compaction and permeability characterizations of fabric reinforcements to assess the evolution of part thickness during filling and post-filling stages of VI process. A Structured Light Scanning system is used for full field thickness monitoring in experiments and a Control Volume Finite Element Method solver is implemented to couple resin flow with fabric's compaction and permeability. Two cases are studied both experimentally and numerically. Evolutions of thickness and pressure validate the developed flow solver, its accuracy in terms of predicting fill times and fill patterns, suitability and limitations of the elastic compaction models for thickness modeling.Materials scienceCompositesMonitoring and modeling of part thickness evolution in vacuum infusion processJournal Article1530-793X624032500004Q31224