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Filament Winding Multifunctional Carbon Nanotube Composites of Various Dimensionalit

Posted on:2018-12-14Degree:Ph.DType:Dissertation
University:North Carolina State UniversityCandidate:Wells, Brian DavidFull Text:PDF
GTID:1471390020456254Subject:Materials science
Abstract/Summary:
Carbon nanotubes (CNT) have been long considered an optimal material for composites due to their high strength, high modulus, and electrical/thermal conductivity. These composite materials have the potential to be used in the aerospace, computer, automotive, medical industry as well as many others. The nano dimensions of these structures make controlled alignment and distribution difficult using many production techniques. An area that shows promise for controlled alignment is the formation of CNT yarns. Different approaches have been used to create yarns with various winding angles and diameters. CNTs resemble traditional textile fiber structures due to their one-dimensional dimensions, axial strength and radial flexibility. One difference is, depending on the length, CNTs can have aspect ratios that far exceed those of traditional textile fibers. This can complicate processing techniques and cause agglomeration which prevents optimal structures from being created. However, with specific aspect ratios and spatial distributions a specific type of CNT, vertically aligned spinnable carbon nanotubes (VASCNTs), have interesting properties that allow carbon nanotubes to be drawn from an array in a continuous aligned web.;This dissertation examines the feasibility of combining VASCNTs with another textile manufacturing process, filament winding, to create structures with various levels of dimensionality. While yarn formation with CNTs has been largely studied, there has not been significant work studying the use of VASCNTs to create composite materials. The studies that have been produces revolve around mixing CNTs into epoxy or creating uni-directional wound structures. In this dissertation VASCNTs are used to create filament wound materials with various degrees of alignment. These structures include 1 dimensional coatings applied to non-conductive polymer monofilaments, two dimensional multifunctional adhesive films, and three dimensional hybrid-nano composites. The angle of alignment between the individual CNTs relative to the overall structure was used to affect the electrical properties in all of these structures and the mechanical properties of the adhesive films and hybrid-nano composites. Varying the concentration of CNT was also found to have a significant effect on the electrical and mechanical properties. The variable properties that can be created with these production techniques allow users to engineer the structure to match the desired property.
Keywords/Search Tags:Composites, Carbon, CNT, Dimensional, Winding, Filament, Create
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