Multifunctional high strength metal composite materials
11491538 · 2022-11-08
Inventors
Cpc classification
B22F1/18
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B22F1/12
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B22F3/22
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B22F2999/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Y10T428/12014
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
B22F3/24
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B22F3/04
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B22F2998/10
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B22F1/16
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B22F3/105
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B22F1/17
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B22F3/24
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B22F3/04
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B22F2003/247
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B22F1/12
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B22F1/18
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B22F1/16
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B22F2998/10
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B22F3/105
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B22F2999/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B22F9/04
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
B22F1/17
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B22F3/105
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B22F3/22
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B22F9/04
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B22F1/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B22F3/24
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B22F3/04
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
A method of producing composites of micro-engineered, coated particulates embedded in a matrix of metal, ceramic powders, or combinations thereof, capable of being tailored to exhibit application-specific desired thermal, physical and mechanical properties, such as High Altitude Exo-atmospheric Nuclear Standard (HAENS) I, II or III radiation protection, to form substitute materials for nickel, titanium, rhenium, magnesium, aluminum, graphite epoxy, and beryllium. The particulates are solid and/or hollow and may be coated with one or more layers of deposited materials before being combined within a substrate of powder metal, ceramic or some combination thereof which also may be coated. The combined micro-engineered nano design powder is consolidated using novel solid-state processes that prevent melting of the matrix and which involve the application of varying pressures to control the formation of the microstructure and resultant mechanical properties.
Claims
1. A metal matrix composite material comprising a plurality of solid or hollow particulates, said plurality of particulates being metal particulates, wherein said plurality of particulates include particulates that are encapsulated in at least two coating layers of different materials, wherein said particulates are Magnesium particulates, and wherein said at least two coating layers of different materials are selected from the group consisting of a W coating layer, a Al coating layer, and a Al.sub.2O.sub.3 coating layer.
2. The material of claim 1, wherein said at least two coating layers include a Al.sub.2O.sub.3 coating layer.
3. The material of claim 1, wherein said at least two coating layers include an Al coating layer.
4. The material of claim 1, wherein said at least two coatings include a W coating layer.
5. The material of claim 4, wherein a coating layer of Al is disposed outside of the coating layer of W.
6. The material of claim 1, wherein said at least two coating layers include a coating layer of Al.sub.2O.sub.3 between two coating layers of Al, wherein the two coating layers of Al comprise the same material.
7. The material of claim 6, wherein said at least two coating layers further include a coating layer of W between the particulates and the coating layer of Al.sub.2O.sub.3 and the two coating layers of Al.
8. The material of claim 1, wherein said at least two coating layers include a coating layer of W and a coating layer of Al disposed outside of the coating layer of W, said metal matrix further including a concentration of metal microballoons ranging between 0 and 30 volume %.
9. The material of claim 1, wherein said at least two coating layers include a coating layer of W and a coating layer of Al disposed outside of the coating layer of W, said metal matrix further including less than 20% by weight concentration of W.
10. The material of claim 9, wherein said coated particulate is 10% by weight Al and said metal matrix is characterized by an ultimate tensile strength between 17 and 54 KSI.
11. The metal matrix composite material of claim 1, wherein said plurality of particulates include particulates that are solid or hollow metal particulates or are solid or hollow metal alloy particulates microspheres, wherein each coating layer is characterized by a corrosion resistance property and wherein the at least two coating layers are ordered such that a first coating layer is positioned closer to the core particle than a second coating layer and imparts an increased corrosion resistance property on the metal matrix composite material relative to the second coating layer.
12. The metal matrix composite material of claim 11, wherein said plurality of particulates include particulates that are hollow metal particulates or are hollow metal alloy particulates microspheres.
13. The metal matrix composite material of claim 1, wherein the particulates are encapsulated in at least three coating layers of different materials, wherein the at least three coating layers of different materials are characterized by different corrosion resistance properties.
14. The metal matrix composite material of claim 13, wherein the plurality of particulates comprise metal microballoons.
15. The material of claim 13, wherein the material includes: tungsten microspheres embedded in a magnesium/aluminum matrix.
16. The material of claim 13, wherein the coating layers include a Tungsten coating layer.
17. The material of claim 1, wherein the particulates are sintered or consolidated.
18. The material of claim 1, wherein said composite material consists of said coated particulates sintered together.
19. The material of claim 1, wherein coated particulates are consolidated in solid-state.
20. The material of claim 1, wherein the at least two coating layers are arranged to provide the metal matrix composite material with corrosion resistance.
21. An article, the article comprising: a metal matrix composite material comprising Magnesium particulates; at least two different coating layers on the Magnesium particulates, the at least two different coating layers selected from the group consisting of: a W coating layer, an Al coating layer, and an Al.sub.2O.sub.3 coating layer; wherein the at least two different coating layers are arranged to provide the metal matrix composite material with corrosion resistance.
22. The article of claim 21, wherein the article comprises: a first coating layer of Al on the Magnesium particulates, a second coating layer of W on the first coating layer, and a third coating layer of Al.sub.2O.sub.3 on the second coating layer.
23. A metal matrix composite material, the material comprising: Magnesium particulates; two different coating layers on the Magnesium particulates, each of the two different coating layers selected from the group consisting of: a coating layer comprising W, a coating layer comprising Al, and a coating layer comprising Al.sub.2O.sub.3.
24. The material of claim 23, wherein the two different coating layers comprise a coating layer comprising W.
25. The material of claim 23, wherein the two different coating layers comprises a coating layer comprising Al.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) The invention is described in more detail with reference to the attached drawings and photographs, in which:
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE ILLUSTRATIVE EMBODIMENT
(11) The following detailed description illustrates the invention by way of example, not by way of limitation of the scope, equivalents or principles of the invention. This description will clearly enable one skilled in the art to make and use the invention, and describes several embodiments, adaptations, variations, alternatives and uses of the invention.
(12) In this regard, the invention is illustrated in the several figures, and is of sufficient complexity that the many parts, interrelationships, and sub-combinations thereof simply cannot be fully illustrated in a single patent-type drawing. For clarity and conciseness, several of the drawings show in schematic, or omit, parts that are not essential in that drawing to a description of a particular feature, aspect or principle of the invention being disclosed. Thus, the best mode embodiment of one feature may be shown in one drawing, and the best mode of another feature will be called out in another drawing.
(13) All publications, patents and applications cited in this specification are herein incorporated by reference as if each individual publication, patent or application had been expressly stated to be incorporated by reference.
(14) In general, the inventive Multifunctional High Strength Metal Composite Materials of this application are composite materials and structures made therefrom that are lighter, stronger and possess application specific properties or capabilities not seen in conventional composite structures. These application specific controllable capabilities include, but are not limited to, integrated radiation shielding from nuclear events (HAENS I, II or III), corrosion resistance, electro-magnetic shielding (EMI), high stiffness, wear resistance, and thermal conductivity.
(15) The novel composite materials comprise composites of micro-engineered, coated particulates embedded in a matrix of metal or ceramic powders, or combinations thereof. The particulates may be solid and/or hollow and may be coated with one or more layers of deposited materials before being combined within a substrate of powder metal, ceramic or some combination thereof which also may be coated. The combined micro-engineered nano design powder is then consolidated using novel solid-state processes that require no melting of the matrix. The consolidation processes are conducted at select temperatures to assure that the melting point of any of the materials involved is never reached. The consolidation process also involves the application of varying pressures to control the formation of the microstructure and resultant mechanical properties. By utilizing only solid-state processes, there are no inter-facial reactions with the microspheres and no detrimental effects due to oxidation of a molten matrix. No matrix is fluidized during consolidation, therefore the microspheres cannot float or segregate within the matrix during processing. In addition, due to the relatively low temperatures involved for some materials, there is no risk of creating an oxygen reactive liquid phase. For example, molten magnesium and aluminum react violently when exposed to air; the present processes eliminate this risk.
(16) As compared with the prior art, the resulting method is unique in the use of micro-engineered, hollow and/or coated particles consolidated through solid-state processes into useable articles having a variety of application specific properties. The thermal, physical and mechanical properties of composite articles produced by the disclosed method are superior to those obtained using current state-of-art, conventional alloys, or metal and ceramic matrix composites.
(17) In general, the method for manufacturing the inventive composite structures comprises the following steps: 1) Selection and/or custom manufacturing of hollow spheres or microballoons (metallic or ceramic in nature), and solid powder(s) (ceramic, metal or alloy or various grain or particles sizes achieved through milling or other powder modification techniques) as may be employed by the design for the matrix; 2) Encapsulating or coating the hollow spheres or microballoons, and/or solid powder with materials that will enhance inter-particle bonding, structural integrity, provide shielding from diverse radiation sources (Neutron, X-Ray, Electron, Proton, etc.), stiffness, reduce weight, and provide other application specific properties as desired. The coating layer may be one layer or multiple layers of the same or varying materials. The layers may be metallic, alloys, co-deposited layers, or ceramic in nature; 3) Pre-consolidating or otherwise forming the powders into a less than fully dense article via micro balloons alone or a mixture of powders, or coated powders with the microballoons via regular pressing in a hard die, Cold Isostatic Pressing (CIP) in an elastomer mold or bag, metal injection molding (MIM) or other techniques to form a near net shape article; and, 4) Consolidating (increasing density) the composite to the desired level appropriate for the specific composition and desired application utilizing novel processes such as Dynamic Forging. The resulting strength, microstructure and density is determined by both the composite formulation and processing route used for consolidation.
(18) The method may further include post processing through coating, extruding, machining, polishing, anodizing, heat treating, laser treatment and/or other processes used to modify the surface, microstructure or thermal, physical or mechanical properties of the fabricated article; and, machining, grinding, water jet cutting, EDM'd (electro-chemical discharge machining), polishing and/or other processing of the article into a final desired shape.
(19) Potential applications for the novel structures include replacement of toxic metals such as expensive beryllium. Similar replacement of less expensive metals such as aluminum, magnesium, titanium, nickel, tungsten, tantalum, ceramic glass, and other metallic or ceramic materials is possible.
(20) Selection of Particulates
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(22) The spheres may be custom manufactured or purchased as hollow spheres or micro balloons (metallic and/or ceramic in nature), and solid powder(s) (ceramic, metal and/or alloy) as desired. The microspheres provide a controlled surface and are scaleable. Particulate materials include, but are not limited to, one or more, metals, alloys, ceramics, and/or elements from Groups 1 through 15 of the Periodic Table of the Elements.
(23) Coating Application
(24) Referring to step 104 of
(25) Combining Particulates with Powder Substrate
(26) Referring to step 106 of
(27) One or more of the powder substrate materials also may be coated with one or more layers of materials selected from the group consisting of metals, alloys, elements, polymers and/or ceramics. The coating materials include, but are not limited to, metals, alloys, polymers, ceramics, elements from Groups 1 through 15 of the Periodic Table of the Elements (including Lithium, Magnesium, Titanium, Rhenium and Tantalum), single wall nanotubes, multi-wall nanotubes, chopped fiber, milled fiber, hydrides, carbon fiber, aromatic polyamide fibers, poly(p-phenylene-2,6-benzobisoxazole, polyethylene, polypropylene, acetyl, nylon, polycarbonate, polyetherketone, polytherimide, polyethylene teraphthalate, polysulfide, aromatic polyester, whiskers, carbon, allotropic carbon, graphite, vitreous carbon, diamond, amorphous carbon, glass, borosilicate glass, alumino-silicate micro spheres, cenospheres, carbide microspheres, carbides, oxides, nitrides, silicon carbide, boron, tungsten carbide, aluminum oxide, beryllium, beryllium powder, beryllium flake, beryllium chips, beryllium oxide, beryllium copper, beryllium alloys, zirconia, silicon nitride, cubic born nitride, hexagonal boron nitride, aluminum nitride, beryllium nitride, silicon hexaboride, tetra boride, lanthanum boride, niobium boride, lithium boride, alumina, magnesium oxide and/or yttrium. The particulates may vary in grain or particle size and may be greater or less in size than the substrate materials.
(28) Pre-Consolidation
(29) Referring again to step 106 of
(30) Dynamic Forging
(31) Referring to step 108 of
(32) The advantages to utilizing coated particles and powders during consolidation include: 1) the ability to preform with near net shape pressing; 2) high compaction strength and density; 3) no processing toxicity; 4) control over phases; 5) minimizes segregation; and, 6) control over composition and chemical interactions, including control over resultant physical, mechanical, thermal, electrical, radiation and other material properties of the consolidated composite.
(33) Post Treatment
(34) Referring to step 110 of
(35) Final Machining
(36) Referring to step 112 of
(37) The steps shown in
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(39) The powders 4 and spheres 6 are then coated to produce coated powders 10 and coated spheres 12. The coatings are also powders and may be metallic, elements, alloys, co-deposited layers, and/or ceramic in nature. The coatings are separately mixed and blended with the powders 4 and spheres 6, respectively. The coatings are shown enlarged in
(40) Referring to
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(45) Referring again to
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(47) As shown in
(48) Referring to
(49) The first mode of Dynamic Forging 18 involves powder particle re-alignment and packing at an applied pressure in the range of 5 to 200 Tons by a forge 38 (shown in step 19) containing heated pressure transmitting media (“PTM”) 36. During this process 18, segment powder particles 32 are re-aligned and packed into a tighter configuration than as existed in the preform 16, thereby partially filling interstitial vacancies. A furnace 42a provides heat in a temperature range of from 100 degrees Centigrade to 1400 degrees Centigrade, with the maximum temperature not exceeding the melting point of any materials in the nano design powder 32. An increase in preform density will be achieved and may be limited to between 3% and 15%.
(50) Referring to
(51) Referring to
(52) Referring to
(53) Moreover, the Dynamic Forging process 18/19 may be utilized to controllably crush a desired approximate percentage of hollow particulates to form a less or more porous composite, as desired. The strength of the composite (due to compression of hollow spheres) versus the weight of the composite (lighter depending on the amount of surviving hollow spheres) may be correlated to levels of compression. Fewer surviving spheres correlate to a higher structural strength; more surviving spheres correlates to a lighter weight composite. Consequently, both open/hollow spheres and crushed spheres provide enhancements to the composite and represent significant improvement over prior art metal matrix composites.
(54) While the Dynamic Forging 18/19 method of the present invention is the preferred mode of consolidation, it should be understood that any suitable or desired method of consolidation, or combination thereof, may be utilized to increase the density of the near net shape article 16, including without limitation, P/M forging, Hot Isostatic Pressing, Laser Processing, sintering, pulse sintering, ARCAM, forging in a granular bed of particles, Metal Injection Molding, Laser-engineered Net Shaping, conventional forging in a mold, direct consolidation of powders by the use of rapid pressure molding, plasma process, thermal spray process, E-Beam Process, Squeeze casting, Liquid Phase Sintering with pressurization, Liquid Phase Sintering without pressurization, vacuum hot pressing, Electro-consolidation, extrusion and ECAP extrusion.
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(61) As can be seen from the results depicted in
(62) The novel metal matrix composites 20 of the present invention also exhibit controllable and predictable tensile strengths.
(63) Similar results are shown in
(64) Application Specific Properties
(65) The following application specific properties using the method disclosed herein may be achieved singly or in combination:
(66) Radiation Hardening: The addition of W, Ta or lead or high atomic number materials, to, for example, magnesium powder enables production of a lightweight composite capable of withstanding and shielding from prompt dose radiation of a nuclear exposure. Effective loadings are equal to DoD HAENS STD I, II or III levels.
(67) X-Ray Shielding: The addition of W, Ta or lead to any powder enables production of a composite that shields X-Ray radiation.
(68) Neutron Shielding: The addition of Boron, Lithium, Gadolinium, hydrides, carbides or other low atomic number elements produces a composite capable of shielding neutron sources.
(69) Combined Radiation Effects: The addition of high atomic and low level atomic number materials to a base powder or hollow sphere will provide combined radiation shielding in one composite.
(70) EMI Shielding: The addition of Nickel, tungsten or other materials to a material, such as Magnesium, produces a composite with EMI shielding without addition of external coatings.
(71) Corrosion Resistance: The addition of Aluminum, tungsten, Zinc, or Aluminum Oxide to, for example, to Lithium or Magnesium, and its alloys provides a composite with corrosion resistance and moisture resistant properties not currently available.
(72) Modulus Enhancement: The addition of microspheres (ceramic or metallic) and coated metal particles (W, Ni, Al or other coatings) increases modulus of a composite. The increases can be 5-100% depending on volume percent added into the composite. As a result, the powder substrate utilized can be heavier than the particulates, such as in the case of Lithium compounds and Magnesium. As an example, an addition of 2.2 gm/cm3 microspheres to Magnesium increases modulus/stiffness, lowers thermal conductivity, and reduces CTE.
(73) Reduced Density: The addition of microspheres can reduce weight 10-60% over the metal or alloy. For example, Aluminum-based materials can have densities of 1.2-2.5 gm/cm3 depending on the amount included. Densities below 1 gm/cm3 and as low as 0.6 gm/cm3 have been achieved.
(74) Thermal expansion reduction: The addition of microspheres or other elements such as Tungsten or Silicon to any composite reduces expansion 2-90%. Magnesium composite thermal expansion can be reduced from 27 down to 4 ppm/C, with the addition of Silicon, tungsten and microspheres.
(75) Thermal conductivity variation: Changes in thermal conductivity can be slight or extreme depending on the size and type of microsphere. Aluminum composites can have a thermal conductivity variability of 200 W/mK or 20 W/mK depending on the type, amount added and size of the microsphere.
(76) Higher Tensile Strength: The addition of elements such as Aluminum, Nickel, and Tungsten, for example, increase the tensile strength of Magnesium-based composites. Similar additions of Tungsten or Nickel to an Aluminum matrix result in tensile strength increases also.
(77) Increased Specific Strength: Increased specific strength is provided through the addition of higher tensile strength materials such as Ni, W, Ti and Al based materials. These elements or compounds of each increase tensile strength while the microspheres decrease the overall density of say for example, Magnesium based composites. This increase of tensile strength and the decrease in density results in an overall increase in specific strength;
(78) Improved Surface Finish: The addition of 10% or 20% microspheres of 5 microns or less in size improves the surface finish and creates a diamond turned material for mirror or other purposes. This has been achieved with Li, Li based alloys, Mg, Mg alloys, Al, Al Alloys, and each coated with tungsten, aluminum or a combination of coatings in a composite.
(79) Improved Safety in Handling: The metal matrix composite materials resulting from micro-engineered particulates dynamically forged upon a beryllium-based substrate are less prone to pose a safety hazard to handlers.
(80) Combinations of the above properties are possible for a given composition. For example, the addition of Tungsten or tungsten carbide coated microspheres increases tensile strength, provides radiation shielding, reduces CTE and increases modulus all in the same composition.
(81) Table I below summarizes some exemplary properties (column 1) of various composites formed according to the invention under ram pressures of 20 ksi (“Ub” in Table 1 refers to microspheres volume).
(82) TABLE-US-00001 TABLE I Mg/10 W Ub 30 Ub 30 Ub 30 20/W/30% Property Al203 ksi 10% ksi 20% ksi 30 Vol WC/Gr Density (g/cm3) 1.95 1.85 1.75 1.65 1.97 Tensile 17 14 12 9 12 Strength (ksi) Modulus (msi) 16 18 20 23 25 CTE (PPM/C) 21-22 20-21 19-21 18-20 12-15 Thermal 180 160 135 110 122 Cond. (W/mk)
(83) As can be seen from the results depicted in Table I, the composites produced according to the invention are highly variable and controllable for these specific properties.
(84) Table II below compares properties of AZ 91C Cast Mag (column 2) against the same property qualities of exemplary composites produced according to the invention.
(85) TABLE-US-00002 TABLE II AZ 91 C Mg/10 Al Mg/W/Al Cast Mg/10- with micro- Mg/W/ with micro- Property Mag 15 Al spheres Al spheres Density 1.75 1.80 1.4-1.7 1.8-1.95 1.6-1.7 (g/cm3) Ultimate 28 17-48 15-31 17-62 13-31 Tensile (ksi) Thermal 80 124-140 100-122 130-152 110-122 Cond. (W/mk) CTE 26 22-24 21-24 17-22 16-20 (PPM/C)
(86) As can be seen from the results depicted in Table II, various properties of the composites produced according to the invention are comparable or exceed the properties of AZ 91 C Cast Mag.
Alternate Embodiment
(87) The present method may alternately involve production of a composite comprising micro-engineered particulates with or without use of a powder substrate, the method comprising the steps of: 1) selecting at least one micro-engineered particulate; 2) coating the particulate with at least one material selected from the group consisting of metals, alloys, element, polymers and ceramics; 3) inserting the particulate into a form; and, 4) forging, sintering or consolidating the particulate to form a composite. Depending on the level of pressure applied during consolidation or Dynamic Forging 18/19, the composite may have varying levels of porosity. Where hollow particulates are utilized, the Dynamic Forging 18/19 process may be utilized to controllably crush a desired approximate percentage of the particulates to form a less porous composite.
INDUSTRIAL APPLICABILITY
(88) It is clear that the invention described herein has wide applicability to the aerospace, automotive, medical and many other industries, namely to provide truly satisfactory metal-based composite substitutes exhibiting tailored properties. Numerous opportunities exist for materials with improved specific properties, such as increased strength, corrosion resistance, shielding capability, lower density, and so on, for aircraft, missiles, electronics, and other aerospace, automotive, DoD or commercial applications. Significantly, the materials may be tailored to exhibit either an increase or decrease in properties, as desired. A main focus of use for these materials is as replacement for aluminum, beryllium, magnesium, silicon carbide, ceramic glasses, Gr/Epoxy polymers, HAENS I, II, III type materials, and titanium and nickel based alloys.
(89) It should be understood that various modifications within the scope of this invention can be made by one of ordinary skill in the art without departing from the spirit thereof and without undue experimentation. This invention is therefore to be defined as broadly as the prior art will permit, and in view of the specification if need be, including a full range of current and future equivalents thereof.