Composite material part having a thermally and electrically conductive portion, and a method of fabricating such a part
10392548 ยท 2019-08-27
Assignee
Inventors
- Nicolas MAISONNAVE (PARIS, FR)
- Marc-Antoine Colot (Fontainebleau, FR)
- Julien LeFrancois (Sainte Genevieve des Bois, FR)
Cpc classification
B29C70/545
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C70/885
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
H01L2924/0002
ELECTRICITY
H01L23/3733
ELECTRICITY
B32B5/26
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
H01L23/3737
ELECTRICITY
H01L2924/00
ELECTRICITY
H01L2924/0002
ELECTRICITY
B32B2262/106
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B32B2260/021
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
H01L2924/00
ELECTRICITY
International classification
B29C70/88
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B32B5/26
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C70/54
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
H01L23/373
ELECTRICITY
B32B5/06
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
A composite material part including reinforcement made of carbon fibers or yarns consolidated by an organic matrix. The part includes one or more thermally and electrically conductive portions in which the carbon fibers or yarns are free of matrix at least in part, the matrix-free carbon fiber or yarn portions being in contact with a material that is thermally and electrically conductive.
Claims
1. A composite material part comprising: reinforcement made of carbon fibers or yarns consolidated by an organic matrix, the reinforcement comprising warp yarns or fibers and weft yarns or fibers woven together, wherein said composite material part includes one or more thermally conductive portions in which the carbon fibers or yarns are free of matrix, wherein the matrix-free carbon fiber or yarn portions are in contact with a material that is thermally conductive, and wherein the material that is thermally conductive is situated in porosities between the carbon fibers or yarns free of matrix.
2. A part according to claim 1, comprising one or more thermally conductive portions in its surface.
3. A part according to claim 1, including at least one recess and wherein each recess includes a thermally conductive portion.
4. A part according to claim 1, wherein the thermally conductive material is also electrically conductive.
5. A conductive wall made of organic matrix composite material including the part according to claim 1.
6. An aircraft including the conductive wall according to claim 5.
7. A package for electronic power equipment including the part according to claim 1.
8. A part according to claim 1, wherein the material that is thermally conductive includes metal and presents a thermal conductivity greater than or equal to 230 watts per meter-kelvin.
9. A method of making one or more thermally conductive portions in a part made of composite material comprising reinforcement of carbon fibers or yarns consolidated by an organic matrix, the reinforcement comprising warp yarns or fibers and weft yarns or fibers woven together, the method comprising: eliminating at least part of the organic matrix in one or more portions of the part so as to expose carbon fibers or yarns at least in part; and depositing a thermally conductive material on the exposed fiber or yarn portions.
10. A method according to claim 9, further comprising forming at least one recess in the part, the eliminating at least part of the organic matrix being performed in the recess, said recess being filled in during the depositing the thermally conductive material on the exposed fiber or yarn portions.
11. A method according to claim 10, wherein, while making the reinforcement, at least one portion of non-interlinking is formed that extends over a determined area and depth, floating yarns present in each portion of non-interlinking being cut away after the reinforcement has been made so as to form a recess.
12. A method according to claim 11, wherein the thermally conductive material is also electrically conductive.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) Other characteristics and advantages of the invention appear from the following description of particular embodiments of the invention given as non-limiting examples and with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
(2)
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF IMPLEMENTATIONS
(6) The invention applies in general manner to any part made of composite material comprising reinforcement made of carbon fibers or yarns and consolidated by an organic matrix, i.e. by a resin. The invention applies more particularly, but not exclusively, to parts for use in dissipating heat generated by heat sources, such as electronic power equipment, such as electrical actuator control modules for aircraft, where the part then advantageously constitutes a conductive wall or a package for power electronics.
(7) The fabrication of such parts is well known and begins with making a fiber structure that may be of various forms, such as: two-dimensional (2D) fabric; three-dimensional (3D) fabric obtained by 3D weaving or as multiple layers; braiding; knitting; felt; a unidirectional (UD) sheet of yarns or tows or multidirectional sheets (nD) obtained by superposing a plurality of UD sheets in different directions and bonding the UD sheets together, e.g. by stitching or by needling.
(8) It is also possible to use a fiber structure made up of a plurality of superposed layers of fabric, braiding, knitting, felt, sheets, etc., which layers are bonded together, e.g. by stitching, by implanting yarns or rigid elements, or by needling.
(9) The yarns constituting the fiber structure are formed from continuous or discontinuous filaments of carbon fibers.
(10) Possibly after shaping, the fiber structure is then consolidated. Consolidation of the fiber structure consists in filling in the pores of the structure, throughout all or part of its volume, with the material that constitutes the matrix.
(11) The matrix of the composite material is obtained in conventional manner using a liquid technique. The liquid technique consists in impregnating the fiber structure with a liquid resin containing a precursor of the matrix material. The precursor is usually in the form of a polymer, possibly diluted in a solvent. The fiber structure is placed in a mold that can be closed in sealed manner and that has a recess with the shape of the final molded part. Thereafter, the mold is closed and the resin is injected throughout the recess in order to impregnate the fiber texture using the resin transfer molding (RTM) technique. Other known impregnation techniques may be used, such as passing the fiber texture through a continuous impregnator, or impregnation by infusion.
(12) The composite material part may also be made by draping (stacking or superposing) plies of carbon fibers or yarns pre-impregnated with the matrix. The preform as constituted in this way is then processed in an autoclave in order to transform the resin into a solid matrix.
(13) Other known techniques of preparing a composite material made of carbon fiber reinforcement consolidated by an organic matrix also form part of the present invention.
(14) The matrix may be an organic matrix such as a thermoplastic or thermosetting resin. Transforming the precursor into a matrix, i.e. solidifying the resin, is performed by raising temperature when the resin is a thermosetting resin, or by lowering temperature when the resin is a thermoplastic resin, generally by heating and/or cooling the mold, after eliminating the solvent, if any, with the preform continuing to be held within the mold. Under such circumstances, a part is made out of organic matrix composite (OMC) material. The organic matrix may be obtained in particular using epoxy resin, such as high performance epoxy resin.
(15)
(16) As can be seen in the enlarged detail view of
(17) In accordance with the invention, and as shown in
(18) Still in accordance with the invention, a thermally conductive material 140 is then deposited in the pores that have been reopened by removing the matrix from the portion 130, as shown in
(19) In the implementation described above with reference to the part 100, the thermally and electrically conductive portion is formed at the surface of the part. Nevertheless, the thermally and electrically conductive portion could equally well be formed to a greater depth in the composite material of the part, as explained below.
(20)
(21) In accordance with the invention, and as shown in
(22) Still in accordance with the invention, the portion 230 is then filled in by depositing a thermally conductive material 240 both in the reopened pores among the yarns that have been laid bare in the depth P2 and in the uncovered zone over the depth P1 (recess 231). The material 240 is preferably also electrically conductive, and may in particular be one of the materials mentioned above.
(23) As shown in
(24) There follows a description of another implementation of the invention enabling a portion of thermal and electrical conductivity to be formed in the core of the composite material part.
(25)
(26) The fiber reinforcement 310 comprises a portion 330 corresponding to a zone of non-interlinking in the reinforcement, i.e. the warp yarns 311 present in the portion 330 over a first depth P1 are not woven with the weft yarns 312, as shown in
(27) After the reinforcement 310 has been made, the non-woven warp yarns 311 are cut away, e.g. by laser or by water jet, so as to form a recess 331 in the reinforcement that extends over the first depth P1 (
(28) The fiber reinforcement 310 is then consolidated with an organic matrix 320 obtained by RTM injection of an epoxy resin into the fiber reinforcement, followed by polymerizing the injected resin so as to form a part 300 made of composite material (
(29) In accordance with the invention, and as shown in
(30) Still in accordance with the invention, the portion 330 is then filled in by depositing a thermally conductive material 340 both in the reopened pores between the yarns laid bare over the depth P2 and in the uncovered zone over the depth P1 (recess 331) (
(31) As shown in
(32) The shape, the dimensions, and the distribution of the thermally and electrically conductive portions may be very varied. They are defined as a function firstly of the desired thermal and/or electrical conduction performance, and secondly as a function of the minimum mechanical properties that the composite material part needs to present.
(33) Non-limiting examples of shapes and dimensions, and of distributions for the thermally and electrically conductive portions are described below, the part presenting recesses or zones of varying thickness that may be formed in particular by strongly attacking the composite material of the part or by forming zones of non-interlinking and cutting away the floating yarns while making the fiber reinforcement, as described above.
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(38) With fiber reinforcement made by stacking 2D plies, the invention makes it possible to create thermal bridges and electrical contacts between the plies of the reinforcement. With fiber reinforcement obtained by 3D weaving, the invention makes it possible to create thermal bridges and electrical contacts between the reinforcing yarns in all three directions.
(39) The part of the invention may include one or more thermally and electrically conductive portions. When the part has a plurality of such portions, they may be formed in alternation at the surface and in the core (in a recess) of the part so as to improve the conductivity of the part to different depths.
(40) The part made of composite material having carbon fiber or yarn reinforcement consolidated by an organic matrix and including one or more portions of thermal conductivity in accordance with the present invention may advantageously be used for making one or more conductive walls made out of organic matrix composite (OMC) materials. The part of the invention may also constitute a package for containing power electronic circuits or components. Specifically, the presence of one or more of these portions serves to improve heat exchange between the inside and the outside of the package, thereby optimizing cooling of the power electronics.