Systems, compositions, and methods for enhanced electromagnetic shielding and corrosion resistance
US-11965116-B2 · Apr 23, 2024 · US
US10497488B2 · US · B2
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Publication number | US-10497488-B2 |
| Application number | US-201816128409-A |
| Country | US |
| Kind code | B2 |
| Filing date | Sep 11, 2018 |
| Priority date | Aug 25, 2014 |
| Publication date | Dec 3, 2019 |
| Grant date | Dec 3, 2019 |
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A method of manufacturing a composite material may include providing one or more layers of reinforcement material penetrated with viscous matrix material that is doped with electrically conductive particles. The method may further include applying a magnetic field to arrange the particles into one or more electrically conductive pathways, and curing the matrix material to secure the pathways in position relative to the reinforcement material.
Opening claim text (preview).
What is claimed is: 1. A composite material comprising: a plurality of layers of reinforcement material, stacked on top of one another in a z-direction; and a cured matrix material penetrating the plurality of layers of reinforcement material and doped with electrically conductive particles; wherein the electrically conductive particles form one or more electrically conductive pathways extending in the z-direction, and are secured in position relative to the layers of reinforcement material by the cured matrix material. 2. The composite material of claim 1 , wherein the particles are made of a paramagnetic material, and the matrix material is a dielectric. 3. The composite material of claim 1 , wherein the matrix material is a resin. 4. The composite material of claim 1 , wherein the reinforcement material includes a plurality of discrete fibers spaced apart from one another, and the one or more electrically conductive pathways include a first pathway extending between two or more of the discrete spaced apart fibers and through at least a majority of an overall thickness in the z-direction of the plurality of layers of the reinforcement material. 5. The composite material of claim 4 , wherein the one or more electrically conductive pathways include a second pathway extending through at least a majority of an overall thickness in the z-direction of the plurality of layers of the reinforcement material, the second pathway being spaced from the first pathway in a direction orthogonal to the z-direction. 6. The composite material of claim 1 , wherein the layers of reinforcement material are separate and distinguishable, and each layer includes a plurality of elongate fibers oriented in parallel. 7. A composite material comprising: one or more layers of reinforcement material each having a thickness in a z-direction; matrix material penetrating the one or more layers of reinforcement material; and a plurality of electrically conductive particles disposed in the matrix material and non-randomly arranged to provide enhanced conductivity in the z-direction. 8. The composite material of claim 7 , wherein a substantial percentage of the particles form one or more electrically conductive chains extending in the z-direction, each chain including at least two or more of the particles in electrical contact with one another. 9. The composite material of claim 8 , wherein the substantial percentage is more than 50%. 10. The composite material of claim 7 , wherein the particles are made of a paramagnetic material, and at least one of the chains extends through a gap between adjacent fibers included in one of the layers. 11. The composite material of claim 10 , wherein a majority of the particles each have a length that is less than a width of the gap. 12. The composite material of claim 11 , wherein each particle has a respective aspect ratio greater than 1, with the aspect ratio being defined as the length of the respective particle divided by another dimension of the respective particle orthogonal to the length of the respective particle. 13. The composite material of claim 7 , wherein the one or more layers includes stacked layers of carbon fibers. 14. The composite material of claim 7 , wherein the one or more layers are separate and distinguishable, and each layer includes a plurality of elongate fibers oriented in parallel. 15. A composite material comprising: a layer of reinforcement material disposed in a matrix material; one or more electrical pathways, each extending through the layer of reinforcement material and the matrix material, and each including a plurality of non-randomly arranged discrete electrically conductive particles; wherein the matrix material permeates the layer of reinforcement material and secures the discrete electrically conductive particles in position. 16. The composite material of claim 15 , wherein the layer of reinforcement material includes a plurality of discrete fibers spaced apart from one another and each of the one or more electrical pathways extends between adjacent fibers. 17. The composite material of claim 16 , wherein a majority of the discrete electrically conductive particles each have a length that is less than an average distance between adjacent fibers. 18. The composite material of claim 17 , wherein each particle has a respective aspect ratio greater than 1, with the aspect ratio being defined as the length of the respective particle divided by another dimension of the respective particle orthogonal to the length of the respective particle. 19. The composite material of claim 15 , wherein the particles are made of a paramagnetic material, and the matrix material is a dielectric. 20. The composite material of claim 15 , further comprising a plurality of stacked layers of reinforcement material disposed in the matrix material, wherein the one or more electrical pathways extend through each layer.
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