User Contributed Dictionary
Noun
composites- Plural of composite
Verb
composites- third-person singular of composite
French
Noun
m|p- Plural of composite
Extensive Definition
Composite materials (or composites for short) are
engineered materials
made from two or more constituent materials with significantly
different physical or chemical properties and which remain separate
and distinct on a macroscopic level within the finished
structure.
Background
The most primitive composite materials comprised
straw and mud in the form of bricks for building construction;
the Biblical
book of Exodus speaks of the
Israelites being
oppressed by Pharaoh, by being
forced to make bricks
without straw being provided. The ancient brick-making process
can still be seen on
Egyptian tomb paintings in the
Metropolitan Museum of Arthttp://www.gnmagazine.org/issues/gn09/gn97ma.pdf.
The most advanced examples perform routinely on spacecraft in
demanding environments. The most visible applications pave our
roadways in the form of either steel and aggregate reinforced
portland
cement or asphalt
concrete. Those composites closest to our personal hygiene form
our shower stalls and bath tubs made of fiberglass. Solid surface,
imitation granite and cultured marble sinks and counter tops are
widely used to enhance our living experiences.
There are two categories of constituent
materials: matrix and reinforcement. At least one portion of each
type is required. The matrix material surrounds and supports the
reinforcement materials by maintaining their relative positions.
The reinforcements impart their special mechanical and physical
properties to enhance the matrix properties. A synergism produces
material properties unavailable from the individual constituent
materials, while the wide variety of matrix and strengthening
materials allows the designer of the product or structure to choose
an optimum combination. Engineered composite materials must be
formed to shape. The matrix material can be introduced to the
reinforcement before or after the reinforcement material is placed
into the mold cavity or onto the mold surface. The matrix material
experiences a melding event, after which the part shape is
essentially set. Depending upon the nature of the matrix material,
this melding event can occur in various ways such as chemical
polymerization or solidification from the melted state.
A variety of molding methods can be used
according to the end-item design requirements. The principal
factors impacting the methodology are the natures of the chosen
matrix and reinforcement materials. Another important factor is the
gross quantity of material to be produced. Large quantities can be
used to justify high capital expenditures for rapid and automated
manufacturing technology. Small production quantities are
accommodated with lower capital expenditures but higher labor and
tooling costs at a correspondingly slower rate. Most commercially
produced composites use a polymer matrix material often called a
resin solution. There are many different polymers available
depending upon the starting raw ingredients. There are several
broad categories, each with numerous variations. The most common
are known as polyester, vinyl ester,
epoxy, phenolic, polyimide, polyamide, polypropylene, PEEK, and others. The
reinforcement materials are often fibers but also commonly ground
minerals. The various methods described below have been developed
to reduce the resin content of the final product, or the fibre
content is increased. As a rule of thumb hand lay up results in a
product containing 60% resin and 40% fibre, whereas vacuum infusion
gives a final product with 40% resin and 60% fibre content. The
strength of the product is greatly dependent on this ratio, so this
increase in fibre content results in a dramatically stronger
product.
Moulding methods
In general, the reinforcing and matrix materials are combined, compacted and processed to undergo a melding event. After the melding event, the part shape is essentially set, although it can deform under certain process conditions. For a thermoset polymeric matrix material, the melding event is a curing reaction that is initiated by the application of additional heat or chemical reactivity such as an organic peroxide. For a thermoplastic polymeric matrix material, the melding event is a solidification from the melted state. For a metal matrix material such as titanium foil, the melding event is a fusing at high pressure and a temperature near the melt point.For many molding methods, it is convenient to
refer to one mold piece as a "lower" mold and another mold piece as
an "upper" mold. Lower and upper refer to the different faces of
the molded panel, not the mold's configuration in space. In this
convention, there is always a lower mold, and sometimes an upper
mold. Part construction begins by applying materials to the lower
mold. Lower mold and upper mold are more generalized descriptors
than more common and specific terms such as male side, female side,
a-side, b-side, tool side, bowl, hat, mandrel, etc. Continuous
manufacturing processes use a different nomenclature.
The molded product is often referred to as a
panel. For certain geometries and material combinations, it can be
referred to as a casting. For certain continuous processes, it can
be referred to as a profile.
Open moulding
A process using a rigid, one sided mould which shapes only one surface of the panel. The opposite surface is determined by the amount of material placed upon the lower mould. Reinforcement materials can be placed manually or robotically. They include continuous fibre forms fashioned into textile constructions and chopped fibre. The matrix is generally a resin, and can be applied with a pressure roller, a spray device or manually. This process is generally done at ambient temperature and atmospheric pressure. Two variations of open moulding are Hand Layup and Spray-up.Vacuum bag moulding
A process using a two-sided mould set that shapes both surfaces of the panel. On the lower side is a rigid mould and on the upper side is a flexible membrane or vacuum bag. The flexible membrane can be a reusable silicone material or an extruded polymer film. Then, vacuum is applied to the mould cavity. This process can be performed at either ambient or elevated temperature with ambient atmospheric pressure acting upon the vacuum bag. Most economical way is using a venturi vacuum and air compressor or a vacuum pump.Pressure bag moulding
This process is related to vacuum bag moulding in exactly the same way as it sounds. A solid female mould is used along with a flexible male mould. The reinforcement is place inside the female mould with just enough resin to allow the fabric to stick in place. A measured amount of resin is then liberally brushed indiscriminately into the mould and the mould is then clamped to a machine that contains the male flexible mould. The flexible male membrane is then inflated with heated compressed air or possibly steam. The female mould can also be heated. Excess resin is forced out along with trapped air. This process is extensively used in the production of composite helmets due to the lower cost of unskilled labour. Cycle times for a helmet bag moulding machine vary form 20 to 45 minutes, but the finished shells require no further curing if the moulds are heated.Autoclave moulding
A process using a two-sided mold set that forms both surfaces of the panel. On the lower side is a rigid mold and on the upper side is a flexible membrane made from silicone or an extruded polymer film such as nylon. Reinforcement materials can be placed manually or robotically. They include continuous fiber forms fashioned into textile constructions. Most often, they are pre-impregnated with the resin in the form of prepreg fabrics or unidirectional tapes. In some instances, a resin film is placed upon the lower mold and dry reinforcement is placed above. The upper mold is installed and vacuum is applied to the mold cavity. The assembly is placed into an autoclave pressure vessel. This process is generally performed at both elevated pressure and elevated temperature. The use of elevated pressure facilitates a high fiber volume fraction and low void content for maximum structural efficiency.Resin transfer moulding (RTM)
A process using a two-sided mold set that forms both surfaces of the panel. The lower side is a rigid mold. The upper side can be a rigid or flexible mold. Flexible molds can be made from composite materials, silicone or extruded polymer films such as nylon. The two sides fit together to produce a mold cavity. The distinguishing feature of resin transfer molding is that the reinforcement materials are placed into this cavity and the mold set is closed prior to the introduction of matrix material. Resin transfer molding includes numerous varieties which differ in the mechanics of how the resin is introduced to the reinforcement in the mold cavity. These variations include everything from vacuum infusion (see also resin infusion) to vacuum assisted resin transfer molding. This process can be performed at either ambient or elevated temperature.Other
Other types of molding include press molding, transfer molding, pultrusion molding, filament winding, casting, centrifugal casting and continuous casting.Tooling
Some types of tooling materials used in the manufacturing of composites structures include invar, steel, aluminum, reinforced silicon rubber, nickle, and carbon fiber. Selection of the tooling material is typically based on, but not limited to, the coefficient of thermal expansion, expected number of cycles, end item tolerance, desired or required surface condition, method of cure, glass transition temperature of the material being molded, molding method, matrix, cost and a variety of other considerations.Mechanics of composite materials
The physical properties of composite materials are generally not isotropic (independent of direction of applied force) in nature, but rather are typically orthotropic (different depending on the direction of the applied force or load). For instance, the stiffness of a composite panel will often depend upon the orientation of the applied forces and/or moments. Panel stiffness is also dependent on the design of the panel. For instance, the fiber reinforcement and matrix used, the method of panel build, thermoset versus thermoplastic, type of weave, and orientation of fiber axis to the primary force.In contrast, isotropic materials (for example,
aluminium or steel), in standard wrought forms, typically have the
same stiffness regardless of the directional orientation of the
applied forces and/or moments.
The relationship between forces/moments and
strains/curvatures for an isotropic material can be described with
the following material properties: Young's
Modulus, the Shear
Modulus and the Poisson's
ratio, in relatively simple mathematical relationships. For the
anisotropic material, it requires the mathematics of a second order
tensor and up to 21 material property constants. For the special
case of orthogonal isotropy, there are three different material
property constants for each of Young's Modulus, Shear Modulus and
Poisson's ratio--a total of 9 constants to describe the
relationship between forces/moments and strains/curvatures.
Categories of fiber reinforced composite materials
Fiber reinforced composite materials can be divided into two main categories normally referred to as short fiber reinforced materials and continuous fiber reinforced materials. Continuous reinforced materials will often constitute a layered or laminated structure. The woven and continuous fiber styles are typically available in a variety of forms, being pre-impregnated with the given matrix (resin), dry, uni-directional tapes of various widths, plain weave, harness satins, braided, and stitched.The short and long fibers are typically employed
in compression molding and sheet molding operations.These come in
the form of flakes, chips, and random mate (which can also be made
from a continuous fiber laid in random fashion until the desired
thickness of the ply / laminate is achieved).
Failure of composites
Shock, impact, or repeated cyclic stresses can cause the laminate to separate at the interface between two layers, a condition known as delamination. Individual fibers can separate from the matrix e.g. fiber pull-out.Composites can fail on the microscopic or macroscopic scale.
Compression failures can occur at both the macro scale or at each
individual reinforcing fiber in compression buckling. Tension
failures can be net section failures of the part or degradation of
the composite at a microscopic scale where one or more of the
layers in the composite fail in tension of the matrix or failure
the bond between the matrix and fibers.
Some composites are brittle and have little
reserve strength beyond the initial onset of failure while others
may have large deformations and have reserve energy absorbing
capacity past the onset of damage. The variations in fibers and
matrices that are available and the mixtures that can be made with
blends leave a very broad range of properties that can be designed
into a composite structure. The best known failure occurred when
the carbon-fiber wing of the Space
Shuttle Columbia fractured when impacted during take-off. It
led to catastrophic break-up of the vehicle when it re-entered the
earth's atmosphere on February 1, 2003.
Examples of composite materials
Fiber reinforced polymers or FRPs include wood (comprising cellulose fibers in a lignin and hemicellulose matrix), carbon-fiber reinforced plastic or CFRP, and glass reinforced plastic or GRP. If classified by matrix then there are thermoplastic composites, short fiber thermoplastics, long fiber thermoplastics or long fiber reinforced thermoplastics. There are numerous thermoset composites, but advanced systems usually incorporate aramid fibre and carbon fibre in an epoxy resin matrix.Composites can also use metal fibres reinforcing
other metals, as in metal
matrix composites or MMC. Magnesium is often used in MMCs
because it has similar mechanical properties as epoxy. The benefit
of magnesium is that it does not degrade in outer space. Ceramic
matrix composites include bone (hydroxyapatite reinforced
with collagen fibers),
Cermet
(ceramic and metal) and concrete. Ceramic matrix
composites are built primarily for toughness, not for strength.
Organic matrix/ceramic aggregate composites include asphalt
concrete, mastic
asphalt, mastic
roller hybrid, dental
composite, syntactic
foam and mother of
pearl. Chobham
armour is a special composite used in military
applications.
Additionally, thermoplastic composite materials
can be formulated with specific metal powders resulting in
materials with a density range from 2 g/cc to 11 g/cc (same density
as lead). These materials can be used in place of traditional
materials such as aluminum, stainless steel, brass, bronze, copper,
lead, and even tungsten in weighting, balancing, vibration
dampening, and radiation shielding applications. High density
composites are an economically viable option when certain materials
are deemed hazardous and are banned (such as lead) or when
secondary operations costs (such as machining, finishing, or
coating) are a factor. Engineered
wood includes a wide variety of different products such as
plywood, oriented
strand board, wood
plastic composite (recycled wood fiber in polyethylene matrix),
Pykrete
(sawdust in ice matrix), Plastic-impregnated or laminated paper or
textiles, Arborite, Formica
(plastic) and Micarta. Other
engineered laminate composites, such as Mallite, use a
central core of end grain balsa wood,
bonded to surface skins of light alloy or GRP. These generate
low-weight, high rigidity materials.
Typical products
Composite materials have gained popularity (despite their generally high cost) in high-performance products that need to be lightweight, yet strong enough to take harsh loading conditions such as aerospace components (tails, wings, fuselages, propellers), boat and scull hulls, bicycle frames and racing car bodies. Other uses include fishing rods and storage tanks. The new Boeing 787 Dreamliner structure including the wings and fuselage is composed of over 50 percent composites.Carbon composite is a key material in today's
launch vehicles and spacecrafts. It is widely used in solar panel
substrates, antenna reflectors and yokes of spacecrafts. It is also
used in payload adapters, inter-stage structures and heat shields
of launch vehicles.
See also
References
Further reading
- Mechanics of Composite Materials
- Handbook of Polymer Composites for Engineers By Leonard Hollaway Published 1994
External links
composites in Arabic: مادة مركبة
composites in Catalan: Compòsit
composites in Czech: Kompozitní materiál
composites in Danish: Komposit
composites in German: Verbundwerkstoff
composites in Spanish: Material compuesto
composites in Persian: کامپوزیت
composites in French: Matériau composite
composites in Indonesian: Material
komposit
composites in Italian: Materiale composito
composites in Hebrew: חומר מרוכב
composites in Malay (macrolanguage): Bahan
komposit
composites in Dutch: Composiet (materiaal)
composites in Japanese: 複合材料
composites in Norwegian:
Komposittmateriale
composites in Polish: Materiał kompozytowy
composites in Portuguese: Compósito
composites in Russian: Композиционный
материал
composites in Simple English: Composite
material
composites in Finnish: Komposiitti
composites in Swedish: Komposit
composites in Thai: วัสดุผสม
composites in Vietnamese: Vật liệu
composite
composites in Turkish: Kompozit malzemeler
composites in Ukrainian: Композити
composites in Chinese: 复合材料