Mechanical, electrical and microstructural characterisation of multifunctional structural power composites

Author:

Greenhalgh ES1,Ankersen J2,Asp LE3,Bismarck A14,Fontana QPV5,Houlle M6,Kalinka G6,Kucernak A1,Mistry M1,Nguyen S1,Qian H1,Shaffer MSP1,Shirshova N7,Steinke JHG1,Wienrich M8

Affiliation:

1. Imperial College London, London, UK

2. GKN Composites Technology Centre, Bristol, UK

3. Swerea SICOMP AB, Mölndal, Sweden

4. Institute of Materials Chemistry and Research, Polymer & Composite Engineering (PaCE) Group, Faculty of Chemistry, University of Vienna, Austria

5. Fontana Technologies, Heanor, UK

6. NANOCYL S.A., Sambreville, Belgium

7. School of Engineering and Computational Sciences, Durham University, UK

8. BAM 5.3, Federal Institute Materials Research & Testing, Berlin, Germany

Abstract

Multifunctional composites which can fulfil more than one role within a system have attracted considerable interest. This work focusses on structural supercapacitors which simultaneously carry mechanical load whilst storing/delivering electrical energy. Critical mechanical properties (in-plane shear and in-plane compression performance) of two monofunctional and four multifunctional materials were characterised, which gave an insight into the relationships between these properties, the microstructures and fracture processes. The reinforcements included baseline T300 fabric, which was then either grafted or sized with carbon nanotubes, whilst the baseline matrix was MTM57, which was blended with ionic liquid and lithium salt (two concentrations) to imbue multifunctionality. The resulting composites exhibited a high degree of matrix heterogeneity, with the ionic liquid phase preferentially forming at the fibres, resulting in poor matrix-dominated properties. However, fibre-dominated properties were not depressed. Thus, it was demonstrated that these materials can now offer weight savings over conventional monofunctional systems when under modest loading.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Materials Chemistry,Mechanical Engineering,Mechanics of Materials,Ceramics and Composites

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