Patent classifications
C04B35/62857
Additive manufacturing technique for placing nuclear reactor fuel within fibers
Nuclear fuel structures and methods for fabricating are disclosed herein. The nuclear fuel structure includes a plurality of fibers arranged in the structure and a multilayer fuel region within at least one fiber of the plurality of fibers. The multilayer fuel region includes an inner layer region made of a nuclear fuel material, and an outer layer region encasing the nuclear fuel material. A plurality of discrete multilayer fuel regions may be formed over a core region along the at least one fiber, the plurality of discrete multilayer fuel regions having a respective inner layer region of nuclear fuel material and a respective outer layer region encasing the nuclear fuel material. The plurality of fibers may be wrapped around an inner rod or tube structure or inside an outer tube structure of the nuclear fuel structure, providing both structural support and the nuclear fuel material of the nuclear fuel structure.
Microstructured fiber interface coatings for composites
Disclosed is a coated ceramic fiber including a silicon carbide coating layer adjacent to the ceramic fiber and a silicon dioxide coating layer adjacent to the silicon carbide coating layer, wherein the silicon dioxide coating layer forms micro cracks after a crystal structure transformation. The coated ceramic fiber may be included in a composite material having a ceramic matrix.
Method of fabricating a ceramic composite
A method of making a ceramic composite component includes providing a fibrous preform or a plurality of fibers, providing a first plurality of particles, coating the first plurality of particles with a coating to produce a first plurality of coated particles, delivering the first plurality of coated particles to the fibrous preform or to an outer surface of the plurality of fibers, and converting the first plurality of coated particles into refractory compounds. The first plurality of particles or the coating comprises a refractory metal.
METHOD FOR MANUFACTURING PART MADE OF COMPOSITE MATERIAL
A method of fabricating a part out of composite material, includes forming a fiber texture from refractory fibers; impregnating the fiber texture for a first time with a first slip containing first refractory particles; eliminating the liquid phase from the first slip so as to leave within the texture only the first refractory particles; impregnating the fiber texture for a second time with a second slip containing second refractory particles; eliminating the liquid phase from the second slip so as to leave within the texture only the second refractory particles and obtain a fiber preform filled with the first and second refractory particles; and sintering the first and second refractory particles present in the fiber preform in order to form a refractory matrix in the preform.
MICROSTRUCTURED FIBER INTERFACE COATINGS FOR COMPOSITES
Disclosed is a coated ceramic fiber including a silicon carbide coating layer adjacent to the ceramic fiber and a silicon dioxide coating layer adjacent to the silicon carbide coating layer, wherein the silicon dioxide coating layer forms micro cracks after a crystal structure transformation. The coated ceramic fiber may be included in a composite material having a ceramic matrix.
Method for producing a consolidated fiber preform
A method for producing a consolidated fiber preform intended for the manufacture of a part made of composite material, includes shaping a fiber texture in a heated metal mold, the texture being pre-impregnated with a transient or fugitive material, or shaping a fiber texture in a metal mold and injecting a transient or fugitive material into the fiber texture held in shape in the metal mold, cooling the mold, removing the set fiber preform from the mold, coating the fiber preform with a slurry containing a powder of ceramic or carbon particles, heat-treating the coated fiber preform so as to form a porous shell around the fiber preform by consolidation of the slurry and so as to remove the transient or fugitive material present in the fiber preform, consolidating the fiber preform by gas-phase chemical infiltration.
OXIDATION-INDUCED SHAPE MEMORY FIBER AND PREPARATION METHOD AND APPLICATION THEREOF
The present disclosure relates to an oxidation-induced shape memory fiber comprising a tension-bearing core material and/or a tension-bearing core material coated with an antioxidative coating, and an oxidizable pressure-bearing coating. The oxidizable pressure-bearing coating is coated outside the tension-bearing core material and/or the tension-bearing core material coated with an antioxidative coating; the oxidizable pressure-bearing coating is in compressive stress state and/or the tension-bearing core material coated with an antioxidative coating and the oxidizable pressure-bearing coating are in tension-compression balance state. The disclosure also relates to preparation and application thereof, the preparation is: reserving anchoring end, exerting tension force on tension-bearing core material and/or tension-bearing core material coated with an antioxidative coating, followed by coating oxidizable pressure-bearing coating thereon. The oxidation-induced shape memory fiber is applicable to high temperature oxidation environment.
Method to additively manufacture a fiber-reinforced ceramic matrix composite
A method of additively manufacturing a ceramic matrix composite material includes providing a ceramic fiber and a powdery base material for a ceramic matrix composite and layer-by-layer building up the ceramic matrix material for the ceramic matrix composite by irradiating of a powder bed formed by the base material with an energy beam according to a predetermined geometry, wherein the base material is melted, solidified and adhesively joined to the ceramic fiber in that parameters of the energy beam are locally chosen such that in the contact region of the ceramic fiber and the powder bed, the ceramic fiber is only partly melted.
METHOD TO ACHIEVE A SMOOTH SURFACE WITH PRECISE TOLERANCE CONTROL FOR A COMPLEX (NON-FLAT) GEOMETRY
A method of producing a CMC having a smooth surface includes forming a fiber preform; rigidizing the preform with an interphase coating; infiltrating a ceramic slurry into the preform to form a green body; conducting secondary operations on the green body; applying a slurry-based layer onto a portion of the green body; and infiltrating the green body with a molten silicon or silicon alloy, such that the CMC exhibits a smooth surface. The application of the slurry-based surface layer onto the green body includes placing the green body into a tool fixture having upper and lower components, such that a gap is present between the green body and at least one of the upper and lower components; and delivering a surface layer slurry into at least one gap, such that the surface layer slurry forms the slurry-based layer on at least a portion of the green body.
MICROSTRUCTURED FIBER INTERFACE COATINGS FOR COMPOSITES
Disclosed is a coated ceramic fiber including a zirconium interface coating layer deposited on the ceramic fiber, a zirconium dioxide interface coating layer adjacent to the zirconium interface coating layer, and an additional interface coating layer adjacent to the zirconium dioxide interface coating layer, wherein zirconium dioxide interface coating layer forms micro cracks after a crystal structure transformation. The coated ceramic fiber may be included in a composite material having a ceramic matrix.