Composite material system including elastomeric, ceramic, and fabric layers
11131527 · 2021-09-28
Assignee
Inventors
- Jonathan G. Kruft (Rockville, MD, US)
- Brandon L. Good (Doylestown, PA, US)
- David A. Roper, Jr. (Glen Burnie, MD, US)
Cpc classification
B32B27/42
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
F41H5/0414
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
B32B2571/02
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B32B27/12
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B32B5/26
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B32B5/08
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B32B2260/04
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B32B2255/02
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B32B2262/14
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
F41H5/0428
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
B32B2270/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B32B9/005
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B32B3/266
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B32B2307/54
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B32B2307/762
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
F41H5/0442
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
B32B15/20
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B32B2260/048
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B32B2262/106
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B32B15/14
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
F41H5/0492
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
B32B2260/021
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
F41H5/0471
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
F41H5/04
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
B32B5/26
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B32B3/26
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B32B9/04
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B32B27/12
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
According to exemplary inventive practice, ceramic powder or slurry is selectively deposited at many discrete locations on each of many fiberglass fabric substrates. The sizes and/or shapes of the ceramic deposits vary among the substrates. The substrates are selectively ordered and stacked so that perpendicular through-plane alignments of respective ceramic deposits form selected three-dimensional geometric shapes. The resultant stack of substrates, characterized by many three-dimensional ceramic inclusions, is impregnated with an elastomer or an epoxy that binds the ceramic-deposited substrates together, resulting in a finished composite product. Inventive composite structures can be multifariously designed and embodied to afford selected ballistic and/or structural and/or electromagnetic qualities. Another mode of inventive practice provides for incorporation of the above-described inventive composite product as a layer in a multilayer composite system that also includes a high strain-rate-sensitivity-hardening polymer layer, a hybrid composite fabric layer, a ceramic layer, and a polymeric ballistic fabric layer.
Claims
1. A multilayer composite system comprising at least five layers, wherein: a first said layer includes a high strain-rate-sensitivity-hardening polymer; a second said layer, adjacent to the first said layer, includes a plural-material fabric, wherein said plural-material fabric includes at least two materials selected from the group consisting of glass, carbon, polypropylene, and aramid; a third said layer, adjacent to the second said layer, includes a preform and a matrix material infused in said preform, said preform including plural substrates and plural quantities of ceramic material deposited on each said substrate, said preform characterized by a layered configuration wherein said substrates adjoin and wherein separate groups of said quantities of said ceramic material align through the adjoined said substrates to describe corresponding three-dimensional ceramic material elements, each said three-dimensional ceramic material element being constituted by a combination of aligned said quantities of said ceramic material deposited on corresponding said substrates; a fourth said layer, adjacent to the third said layer, includes a ceramic material; a fifth said layer, adjacent to the fourth said layer, includes a polymer ballistic fabric.
2. The multilayer composite system of claim 1, wherein said high strain-rate-sensitivity-hardening polymer is selected from the group consisting of polyurethane, polyurea, and a combination of polyurethane and polyurea.
3. The multilayer composite system of claim 1, wherein said plural-material fabric is selected from the group consisting of polypropylene-glass fabric, carbon-glass fabric, and aramid-glass fabric.
4. The multilayer composite system of claim 1, wherein said ceramic material is selected from the group consisting of aluminum oxide, silicon carbide, boron carbide, titanium carbide, tungsten carbide, magnesium oxide, titanium dioxide, silicon nitride, and porcelain.
5. The multilayer composite system of claim 1, wherein said polymer ballistic fabric includes an ultra-high molecular weight polyethylene.
6. The multilayer composite system of claim 1, further comprising a sixth said layer, adjacent to the fifth said layer, wherein the sixth said layer includes a metallic sheet.
7. The multilayer composite system of claim 1, wherein each said three-dimensional ceramic material element has a three-dimensional shape that is either polyhedral or curved or a combination of polyhedral and curved.
8. The multilayer composite system of claim 1, wherein said matrix material is an epoxy, or an elastomer, or a combination of a said epoxy and a said elastomer.
9. The multilayer composite system of claim 1, wherein each said substrate is a fiberglass fabric.
10. The multilayer composite system of claim 1, wherein said plural-material fabric is a hybrid blend fabric.
11. A multilayer composite system comprising at least four layers, wherein: said at least four layers include a first said layer, a second said layer, a third said layer, and a fourth said layer; the second said layer is situated between the first said layer and the third said layer; the third said layer is situated between the second said layer and the fourth said layer; the first said layer includes a high strain-rate-sensitivity-hardening polymer; the second said layer includes a preform and a matrix material infused in said preform, said preform including plural substrates and plural quantities of ceramic material deposited on each said substrate, said preform characterized by a layered configuration wherein said substrates adjoin and wherein separate groups of said quantities of said ceramic material align through the adjoined said substrates to describe corresponding three-dimensional ceramic material elements, each said three-dimensional ceramic material element being constituted by a combination of aligned said quantities of said ceramic material deposited on corresponding said substrates; the third said layer includes a ceramic material; the fourth said layer includes a polymer ballistic fabric.
12. The multilayer composite system of claim 11, wherein: the multilayer composite system further comprises a fifth said layer; the fifth said layer includes a fabric that is not a polymer ballistic fabric; the fifth said layer is situated between the first said layer and the second said layer; said fabric includes at least one material selected from the group consisting of glass, carbon, polypropylene, and aramid.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) The present invention will now be described, by way of example, with reference to the accompanying drawings, wherein:
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DESCRIPTION OF EXEMPLARY EMBODIMENTS OF THE INVENTION
(13) Referring now to the figures, exemplary practice of the present invention provides for construction of a multilayer composite structure 765. The construction includes implementation of a ceramic powder material, several/many substrates, and polymeric matrix material. In the example of inventive practice illustrated in
(14) Terms such as “deposited ceramic quantity” and “ceramic deposit” are used interchangeably herein. Each substrate 60 having ceramic material 50 deposited thereon is designated herein a ceramic-deposited substrate 65. The eight substrates 60 are respectively designated herein substrates 60a, 60b, 60c, 60d, 60e, 60f, 60g, and 60h. Each substrate 60 is a nonmetallic fabric, for instance a fiberglass fabric such as a fiberglass S-glass fabric.
(15) The ceramic quantities 50 deposited on the eight substrates 60 are respectively designated herein ceramic quantities 50a, 50b, 50c, 50d, 50e, 50f, 50g, and 50h. Circular ceramic quantities 50a, 50b, 50c, 50d, 50e, 50f, 50g, and 50h are respectively deposited on substrates 60a, 60b, 60c, 60d, 60e, 60f, 60g, and 60h. The eight ceramic-deposited substrates 65 are respectively designated substrates 65a, 65b, 65c, 65d, 65e, 65f, 65g, and 65h.
(16) Examples of glass fiber materials that may be suitable for inventive practice of fiberglass fabric substrates 60 include but are not limited to E-glass, A-glass, E-CR-glass, C-glass, D-glass, R-glass, and S-glass. Examples of ceramic materials that may be suitable for inventive practice of ceramic quantities 50 include but are not limited to aluminum oxide (alumina), silicon carbide, boron carbide, titanium carbide, tungsten carbide, magnesium oxide, titanium dioxide, silicon nitride, and porcelain.
(17) As
(18) Substrates 60 (i.e., substrates 60a through 60h) have matching arrangements of the respective geometric centers c of the six circular ceramic quantities 50 deposited thereon. Accordingly, when eight horizontal substrates 60 having ceramic quantities 50 deposited thereon are vertically stacked to form a composite preform structure 650 having a rectangular prismatic geometric shape (e.g., as depicted in
(19) Geometric ceramic shapes 500 are synonymously referred to herein as ceramic “groupings,” ceramic “inclusions,” or “ceramic elements.” Each ceramic grouping/inclusion/element 500 denotes a three-dimensional geometric ceramic shape that is collectively defined by a series of ceramic quantities 50 that are coaxially deposited upon successive parallel adjacent substrates 60 in accordance with the present invention. As shown in
(20) As depicted in
(21) The present invention may be embodied, for example, as having a regular (e.g., periodic) arrangement of conical ceramic elements 500. As shown in
(22) The inventive composite product 765.sub.3D depicted in
(23) Inventive practice of composite systems having a regular arrangement of conical ceramic elements 500 may be propitious in terms of (i) armor (e.g., ballistic applications), (ii) structure, and (iii) electromagnetics.
(24) Generally speaking, based on anecdotal evidence at least, use of conical ceramic geometries has previously been considered in the armor-related arts. Ceramic shapes that are partially conical in character are disclosed by Martin et al. U.S. Pat. No. 7,685,922 B1, incorporated herein by reference, and Moore, III et al. U.S. Pat. No. 7,866,248, incorporated herein by reference. Exemplary inventive practice implementing conical ceramic elements is believed by the present inventors to hold great promise in armor systems (e.g., ballistic applications).
(25) Furthermore, inventive practice need not be compromising in effect with respect to the structural fortitude of a composite system. For instance, conical ceramic inclusions 500 may be configured in an inventive composite system so as to be insufficiently high in volume fraction to degrade the structural performance of the inventive composite system.
(26) Conical ceramic elements 500 may act as impedance tapers, thereby allowing for all or substantially all of the electromagnetic energy at a particular band to transmit through the inventive composite system. For instance, an inventive composite system may act as a radome for a particular antenna or group of antennas. By way of example, an inventive composite system suitable for a radome application may be characterized by a ceramic deposit material made of magnesium oxide powder or titanium dioxide powder, a multilayer (multi-stratified) preform constructed of substrates made of fiberglass S-glass fabric, and a prepreg epoxy resin infused into the preform.
(27) An example of inventive fabrication of a composite structure product 765 is illustrated in
(28) As shown in
(29) As shown in
(30) As shown in
(31) As depicted in
(32) As shown in
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(34) Inventive practice admits of multifarious shapes, thicknesses, materials, and/or arrangements of ceramic inclusions 500. For instance, ceramic inclusions 500 may be: either homogeneous or heterogeneous in size; either homogeneous or heterogeneous in geometric shape; either homogeneous or heterogeneous in material composition; either regular (e.g., periodic) or irregular (e.g., non-periodic) in arrangement or pattern. Mixtures of sizes and/or shapes and/or compositions of ceramic inclusions 500 are possible in inventive practice. Such homogeneities and heterogeneities may manifest in multifarious ways in inventive practice of either two-dimensionally arrayed ceramic elements 500 or three-dimensionally arrayed ceramic elements 500.
(35) Previously described herein are examples of conical and truncated conical shapes of ceramic elements 500. Other examples of possible shapes of ceramic element 500 in inventive practice include but are not limited to: three-sided or triangular pyramid (
(36) Note that the shapes of ceramic element 500 need not have symmetrical profiles, such as exhibited by cones, truncated cones, pyramids, spheres, hemispheres, etc. For instance, curved or angled/slanted frustums and other asymmetric shapes (e.g., as shown in
(37) With reference to
(38) Inventive practice of an inventive stratified composite system 865, such as exemplified by
(39) The adjacent layers of inventive multilayer material system 865 include: (i) a low-density, high-strain-rate polymer first (front) layer 810; followed by (ii) a composite (e.g., polymer-glass) hybrid fabric second layer 820; followed by (iii) an inventive composite third layer 765 (e.g., the inventive composite product 765 shown in
(40) The first layer 810 of the inventive composite system 865 shown in
(41) High-strain-rate polymers are known to be effective against projectiles because they demonstrate high strain-rate-sensitivity-hardening when subjected to high rate loading. High strain-rate-sensitivity polymers (synonymously referred to herein as high-strain-rate-sensitivity elastomers) can be effective against projectiles because they become highly rigid when subjected to high rate loading by a projectile. The transient rigidity is a physical response to high rate loading, and creates a transient high-strength barrier to a penetrator. This physical rigidifying response creates a transient, very high-strength barrier to a penetrator. The transient rigidity of a high strain-rate-sensitivity-hardening polymer is significantly increased when the polymer is confined.
(42) Many of the high strain-rate-sensitivity-hardening polymers that may be suitable for inventive practice demonstrate a Young's modulus of about 1,000 psi to 4,000 psi when tested at lower strain rates. At higher strain rates—e.g., in the range of about 1,000/second to 100,000/second—the high strain-rate-sensitivity polymer, when confined, demonstrates a Young's modulus of about 350,000 psi to 500,000 psi or greater, and an increase in tensile strength from about 2,000-8,000 psi to about 80,000 psi.
(43) Examples of high strain-rate-sensitivity-hardening elastomers are disclosed in the following references, each of which is incorporated herein by reference: U.S. Pat. No. 7,300,893 B2 to Barsoum et al. entitled “Armor Including a Strain Rate Hardening Elastomer”; U.S. Pat. No. 7,794,808 B2 to Dudt et al. entitled “Elastomeric Damage-Control Barrier”; U.S. Pat. No. 7,938,053 to Dudt et al. entitled “Armor”; U.S. Pat. No. 7,946,211 B1 to Winchester et al. entitled “Electrical and Elastomeric Disruption of High-Velocity Projectiles”; U.S. Pat. No. 8,580,387 B1 to Fedderly et al. entitled “Polyurea Composite Armor.”
(44) The second layer 820 of the inventive composite system 865 shown in
(45) The third layer 765 of the inventive composite system 865 shown in
(46) The fourth layer 830 of the inventive composite system 865 shown in
(47) The fifth layer 840 of the inventive composite system 865 shown in
(48) The sixth layer 850 of the inventive composite system 865 shown in
(49) An inventive prototype structure 865 such as depicted in
(50) The tested example of inventive composite material system 865 represented a multifunctional material system, exhibiting all three functional milestones, viz., ballistic resistance, structural strength, and wideband radar attenuation with significant power loss within multiple radar bands. Prototype inventive system 865 withstood direct fire ballistic testing, with multi-hit defeat performance. Furthermore, the inventive prototype 865 exhibited structural integrity and significant wideband attenuation in radar bands of interest. Exemplary inventive system 865 demonstrated an ability to control electromagnetic energy at each material level of its composite stack.
(51) Inventive practice is also possible whereby one or more layers are omitted from multilayer composite material system 865. Now referring to
(52) Exemplary inventive layered material systems 865 and 875 similarly address armor, structural, and electromagnetic functionalities. Furthermore, both modes of inventive practice lend themselves to being variously embodied to meet various requirements, such as: more or less powerful ballistic threats; more or less stringent structural requirements; more or less radar attenuation; or any combination thereof. The variability of inventive design may be effected by adjusting thickness and/or material of one or more layers, and/or by removing one or more layers entirely.
(53) For example, to meet a larger caliber round, the thickness and choice of ceramic plate 830 can be adjusted. Conversely, if the threat being met is not armor-piercing in nature, ceramic plate 830 can be removed entirely from the inventive structure. One or more layers from among layers 810, 820, 765, 830, 840, 840, and 860 can be expanded or contracted or removed, as requirements demand. Inventive material system 875 represents inventive composite material system 865 exclusive of inventive composite structure 765. Note that the thicknesses of the remaining layers of inventive material system 875 are increased, vis-à-vis the corresponding layers of inventive material system 865, in order to maintain all three functional requirements (i.e., ballistic, structural, electromagnetic).
(54) Exemplary inventive practice of a layered composite material system may include, as a material base so to speak, an electromagnetically controlled high-strain rate polymer ballistic fabric 840 and/or an electromagnetically controlled conventional composite fabric 820. From there, the inventive system can include or exclude any material layer or layers from among inventive composite 765 (which includes 3D ceramic inclusions 50), ceramic plate 830, high strain-rate polymers 810, hybrid fabrics 820, and conventional ballistic composite fabrics 840.
(55) Exemplary inventive practice functionally integrates and permits precise tailoring of, within a composite structure or system, at least two properties from among electromagnetic properties, ballistic properties, and structural properties. An inventive composite structure/system may be embodied to be characterized by: armor (e.g., ballistic) and structural functionalities; or, by armor (e.g., ballistic) and electromagnetic functionalities; or, by structural and electromagnetic functionalities. By integrating these functions, inventive structures and systems can be lighter, thinner, and mechanically stronger, and afford better ballistic and electromagnetic performance, as compared with conventional parasitic counterparts.
(56) This application is related to U.S. patent application Ser. No. 15/360,708, filed 23 Nov. 2016, incorporated herein by reference, inventors Jonathan G. Kruft and Brandon L. Good, invention entitled “Multilayer Composite Structure Having Geometrically Defined Ceramic Inclusions.”
(57) The present invention, which is disclosed herein, is not to be limited by the embodiments described or illustrated herein, which are given by way of example and not of limitation. Other embodiments of the present invention will be apparent to those skilled in the art from a consideration of the instant disclosure, or from practice of the present invention. Various omissions, modifications, and changes to the principles disclosed herein may be made by one skilled in the art without departing from the true scope and spirit of the present invention, which is indicated by the following claims.