Realization of the properties of carbon fibres in composite materials. Part 2. Carbon fibre composites with a metal matrix (review)

1996 ◽  
Vol 27 (3) ◽  
pp. 176-183
Author(s):  
V. Ya. Varshavskii
RSC Advances ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 5 (65) ◽  
pp. 52347-52354 ◽  
Author(s):  
Min Niu ◽  
Hongjie Wang ◽  
Jiangbo Wen ◽  
Mingbo Ma ◽  
Xingyu Fan

An oxidation protective Si(O)C coating was fabricated on the carbon fibres of carbon-bonded carbon fibre (CBCF) composites using sol–gel method using dimethoxydimethylsilane and methyltrimethoxysilane as precursors.


This paper presents the Quasi Static Indentation (QSI) behavior of the chopped carbon fibre composites with three different loadings of nanoclay. The composites, which are Carbon fibre (CF), 1wt% Nanoclay–Carbon Fibre (1NC-CF), 3wt% Nanoclay–Carbon Fibre (3NC-CF) and 5wt% Nanoclay–Carbon Fibre (5NC-CF) were prepared using hand lay-up method. The nanoclay was dispersed using a three roll milling machine. The 10wt% of chopped carbon fibres with 3-5 mm length were used in fabricating these composites. The QSI test was conducted using Universal Testing Machine according to the ASTM D6264. The damage section was examined using optical microscopy. The results show that the energy absorbed was increased with addition of nanoclay up to 81.42 %, 137.69 % and 202.95 % for 1NC-CF, 3NC-CF and 5NC-CF composites, respectively. It was concluded that the addition of the nanoclay enhanced the QSI of chopped carbon fibres composites


MICC 90 ◽  
1991 ◽  
pp. 857-861
Author(s):  
A. Moscalenko ◽  
V. Rochupkin ◽  
V. Jevsjucov ◽  
V. Kilin ◽  
J. Davidov

2011 ◽  
Vol 1304 ◽  
Author(s):  
Benjamin L. Farmer ◽  
Mark A. Beard ◽  
Oana Ghita ◽  
Robert Allen ◽  
Ken E. Evans

ABSTRACTLong carbon fibre polymer composites represent the state-of-the-art materials technology for high performance weight driven structures, such as airframes. Although a significant amount of optimisation remains to be done to fully exploit the benefits of long fibre composites, these materials are relatively speaking still very crude, when compared to what nature has achieved with wood or bone for example. Nanomaterials, and specifically carbon nanotubes (CNTs), have teased with their spectacular mechanical and physical properties in isolation. These headline properties have prompted much work into the manufacturing of composite materials using CNTs as reinforcements, but thus far, successful exploitation of these impressive properties has been modest. A gap remains before these materials represent a real competition to long carbon fibre composites, even though fairly modest applications such as CNTs as fillers for matrix toughening and imparting electrical functionality are showing some promise. In this paper a critique is made of various reinforcement approaches through the lens of ’nano-augmented, ’nano-engineered’ and ’nano-enabled’ categories as defined by Airbus. These approaches are compared to an analysis of nature’s ’baseline’. A new ’nano-enabled’ strategy for the growth of fully aligned and dispersed bulk CNT composite materials and structures, allowing for simultaneous multi-scalar morphological and topological optimisation, is described. This new strategy, analogous to nature’s approach, consists of the vapour phase growth of aligned forests of carbon nanotubes coupled to the environment of Additive Layer Manufacturing (ALM). Early feasibility results are presented and currently identified challenges to successful scale-up are discussed.


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