Carbon fiber-reinforced polymer (CFRP) composites are in urgent demand in the aerospace, new energy vehicle, and wind power sectors owing to their superior specific strength, specific modulus, and lightweight potential. However, molding defects, such as voids, dry spots, and delamination, arising from their anisotropy and weak interlaminar bonding, severely constrain their service performance. Advanced molding technologies represent the key to overcoming this bottleneck. This paper systematically reviews typical advanced molding technologies in the field of CFRP composites, including resin transfer molding (RTM) and vacuum-assisted resin transfer molding (VARTM) in liquid composite molding, autoclave molding and compression molding (CM) in prepreg molding, and automated fiber placement (AFP) and material extrusion (ME) in automated molding. From an integrated perspective of “technological evolution–process characteristics–defect mechanisms–optimization strategies,” this review summarizes the technical principles, development trajectories, and core advantages of each process, analyzes the formation mechanisms of typical defects, including voids, dry spots, delamination, wrinkles, warpage, and melt instability, and summarizes multidimensional optimization advances in process parameter regulation, numerical simulation, resin modification, equipment upgrading, path planning, and thermal management. Furthermore, the differences and complementarities among these processes in terms of molding precision, efficiency, cost, and applicable scope are compared. Finally, future development directions, including digital twins, green low-carbon manufacturing, ultra-large integrated structures, multi-process integration, standardized defect characterization, and low-cost collaborative design, are discussed. This paper aims to provide systematic theoretical references and technical support for the optimization and upgrading, process integration, and industrial application of advanced CFRP molding technologies.
Li et al. (Mon,) studied this question.
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