Patent classifications
C04B35/589
METHOD FOR MANUFACTURING A COMPOSITE MATERIAL PART USING A HYBRID CROSS-LINKED COPOLYMER
A method for manufacturing a part made of composite material includes forming a ceramic matrix phase in pores of a fibrous preform by pyrolysis of a cross-linked copolymer ceramic precursor, the cross-linked copolymer including a first precursor macromolecular chain of a first ceramic having free carbon, and a second precursor macromolecular chain of a second ceramic having free silicon, the first macromolecular chain being bonded to the second macromolecular chain by cross-linking bridges including a bonding structure of formula *.sup.1—X—*.sup.2; in this formula, X designates boron or aluminium, -*.sup.1 designates the bond to the first macromolecular chain and -*.sup.2 the bond to the second macromolecular chain.
Processing of non-oxide ceramics from sol-gel methods
A general procedure applied to a variety of sol-gel precursors and solvent systems for preparing and controlling homogeneous dispersions of very small particles within each other. Fine homogenous dispersions processed at elevated temperatures and controlled atmospheres make a ceramic powder to be consolidated into a component by standard commercial means: sinter, hot press, hot isostatic pressing (HIP), hot/cold extrusion, spark plasma sinter (SPS), etc.
Processing of non-oxide ceramics from sol-gel methods
A general procedure applied to a variety of sol-gel precursors and solvent systems for preparing and controlling homogeneous dispersions of very small particles within each other. Fine homogenous dispersions processed at elevated temperatures and controlled atmospheres make a ceramic powder to be consolidated into a component by standard commercial means: sinter, hot press, hot isostatic pressing (HIP), hot/cold extrusion, spark plasma sinter (SPS), etc.
CERAMIC ADDITIVE MANUFACTURING TECHNIQUES FOR GAS INJECTORS
A ceramic gas injector and method of fabrication are described. The gas injector has an inlet portion to which a gas is introduced via an inlet hole and contains a conformal channel between the inlet hole and a sidewall, an outlet portion from which the gas is provided from the gas injector and a collar disposed between the inlet and outlet portions. The channel extends into the collar. The channel has channel sections each of which extends through the inlet portion and terminates at both inlet ends before reaching the inlet face and collar ends before reaching the outlet portion. Alternating adjacent pairs of channel sections are connected via the inlet ends with adjacent pairs that are not connected via the inlet ends connected via the collar ends. Ports in a sidewall of the collar are connected with an adjacent pairs of sections not connected via the inlet ends.
Hybrid multifunctional composite material and method of making the same
Hybrid composite materials including carbon nanotube sheets and flexible ceramic materials, and methods of making the same are provided herein. In one embodiment, a method of forming a hybrid composite material is provided, the method including: placing a layer of a first flexible ceramic composite on a lay-up tooling surface; applying a sheet of a pre-preg carbon fiber reinforced polymer on the flexible ceramic composite; curing the flexible ceramic composite and the pre-preg carbon fiber reinforced polymer sheet together to form a hybrid composite material; and removing the hybrid composite material from the lay-up tooling surface, wherein the first flexible ceramic composite comprises an exterior surface of the hybrid composite material.
Hybrid multifunctional composite material and method of making the same
Hybrid composite materials including carbon nanotube sheets and flexible ceramic materials, and methods of making the same are provided herein. In one embodiment, a method of forming a hybrid composite material is provided, the method including: placing a layer of a first flexible ceramic composite on a lay-up tooling surface; applying a sheet of a pre-preg carbon fiber reinforced polymer on the flexible ceramic composite; curing the flexible ceramic composite and the pre-preg carbon fiber reinforced polymer sheet together to form a hybrid composite material; and removing the hybrid composite material from the lay-up tooling surface, wherein the first flexible ceramic composite comprises an exterior surface of the hybrid composite material.
Polymeric Ceramic Precursors, Apparatuses, Systems, and Methods
Provided herein are methods of manufacturing a ceramic article. The methods may include providing a liquid-state pre-ceramic polymer component, disposing the liquid-state pre-ceramic polymer component on a support, curing the liquid-state pre-ceramic polymer component, and subjecting the pre-ceramic polymer to pyrolysis. Apparatuses and systems for manufacturing a ceramic article also are provided.
Additive Manufacturing of Polymer Derived Ceramics
A layer by layer additive manufacturing system from liquid polymers for producing dense and defect free polymer-derived ceramic bodies of a three dimensional architecture.
Additive Manufacturing of Polymer Ceramics
Scalable 3D-printing of ceramics includes dispensing a preceramic polymer at the tip of a moving nozzle into a gel that can reversibly switch between fluid and solid states, and subsequently thermally cross-linking the entire printed part “at-once” while still inside the same gel. The solid gel, including mineral oil and silica nanoparticles, converts to fluid at the tip of the moving nozzle, allows the polymer solution to be dispensed, and quickly returns to a solid state to maintain the geometry of the printed polymer both during printing and the subsequent high temperature (160° C.) cross-linking. The cross-linked part is retrieved from the gel and converted to ceramic by high temperature pyrolysis. This scalable process opens new opportunities for low-cost, high-speed production of complex 3-dimensional ceramic parts, and will be widely used for high temperature and corrosive environment applications, including electronics and sensors, microelectromechanical systems, energy, and structural applications.
N—H free and Si-rich per-hydridopolysilzane compositions, their synthesis, and applications
Solid or liquid N—H free, C-free, and Si-rich perhydropolysilazane compositions comprising units having the following formula [—N(SiH.sub.3).sub.x(SiH.sub.2—).sub.y], wherein x=0, 1, or 2 and y=0, 1, or 2 when x+y=2; and x=0, 1 or 2 and y=1, 2, or 3 when x+y=3 are disclosed. Also disclosed are synthesis methods and applications for the same.