Pultrusion

Pultrusion is a continuous composite manufacturing process where fiber reinforcements are pulled through resin and a heated die to form high-strength profiles with constant cross-sections. It integrates technical textiles like rovings and fabrics, enabling lightweight, durable, and corrosion-resistant structural components widely used in infrastructure and industrial applications.

Step by Step Guide

  1. Fiber Feeding (Creel System)
    Continuous fibers (rovings, mats, fabrics) are unwound and aligned
  2. Resin Impregnation (Wet-Out)
    Fibers pass through resin bath/injection → fully saturated
  3. Preforming Section
    Fibers are shaped and excess resin is removed
  4. Heated Die (Core Stage)
    • Fibers pulled through heated steel die
    • Resin polymerizes (cures) → final shape formed
  5. Pulling Mechanism
    Continuous pulling ensures uniform speed and quality
  6. Cooling & Cutting
    Final composite profile is cooled and cut into lengths

Material Used

Fibers (Reinforcements)

  • Glass fibers (E-glass, S-glass)
  • Carbon fibers
  • Aramid fibers

Fabric Forms

  • Rovings (continuous filaments)
  • Woven fabrics
  • Continuous filament mats (CFM)
  • Stitched / multiaxial fabrics

Advantages

  • Continuous and highly efficient production
  • High strength-to-weight ratio
  • Excellent fiber alignment
  • Superior corrosion and weather resistance
  • Consistent quality and dimensional accuracy

Limitations

  • Restricted to constant cross-section profiles
  • Limited design flexibility for complex geometries
  • High initial tooling cost

Applications & End Products

  • Structural beams, channels, and angles
  • FRP gratings and walkways
  • Cable trays and ladder rails
  • Utility poles and rebars
  • Bridge and infrastructure components
  • Window frames and cooling tower parts

Applications & End Products

Pultrusion is preferred when:

  • Continuous production of uniform profiles is required
  • High strength and lightweight performance are critical
  • Corrosion resistance is needed (chemical, marine environments)
  • Large-scale production with consistent quality is desired
  • Simple cross-sectional geometries are sufficient