✅3.5 - Composites Flashcards

1
Q

What is a composite?

A

A material that is made from two or more materials which have significantly different physical or chemical properties; when combined they create a single material which is often lighter and stronger that the original materials on their own

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2
Q

Why are composites used?

A

Because they can be engineered to meet the exact requirements of a specific application

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3
Q

Examples of early composites (2)

A
  • Combining mud (wet soil or clay) with plant material such as straw to make bricks
  • Concrete, comprised of small stones and gravel with cement and sand
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4
Q

Three main composite groups (modern composites)

A
  • Carbon-fibre Reinforced Polymers (CFRP)
  • Glass-fibre Reinforced Polymers (GRP)
  • Aramid products (Kevlar®)
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5
Q

Glass-fibre Reinforced Polymers (GRP)

A

A relatively composite material, also known as fibreglass which is made from strands of glass which form a flexible matrix or fabric

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6
Q

Benefits of GRP

A
  • Strong compared to its weight
  • Corrosion resistant
  • Water resistant
  • Variation during manufacture in the thickness of layers can produce different weights and strengths
  • Suited for batch productions
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7
Q

Kevlar®

A

One of a family of materials developed froma synthetic fibre created by chemist Stephanie Kwolek in 1965; formed by combining paraphenylenediamine and terephtaloyl chloride to result in a super stiff, heat resistant polymer that is nine times stronger than nylon

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8
Q

Benefits of Kevlar®

A
  • Lighter
  • Stronger
  • Flexible
  • High performance
  • Safer
  • Natural toughness allows fabrics and threads to stand up to repeated abuse
  • Helps minimise vibration transfer
  • Can sustain deformation without breaking
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9
Q

Carbon-fibre Reinforced Polymers (CFRP)

A

One of the most expensive composite materials but boasts the best strength to weight ratio of any construction material; it is made from high tensile strength carbon fibres which are woven together and then encased in a polymer resin

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10
Q

Benefits of CFRP

A
  • Resistant to stretching
  • Rigid
  • Light in weight yet strong
  • High tolerance to heat
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11
Q

Examples of where GRP is used (5)

A

Manufacture of:
- Car bodies
- Water tanks
- Swimming pool slides
- Canoes
- Boat hulls

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12
Q

Examples of where Kevlar® is used (2)

A

Manufacture of:
- Garments, mostly known for bullet-proof vests
- Personal Protective Equipment (PPE), used to protect people working in hazardous jobs

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13
Q

Examples of where CFRP is used

A

Manufacture of products in the:
- Marine industry
- Automotive industry (e.g. Formula 1 car bodies)
- Defence industry
- Sports and leisure industries (e.g. sporting prosthetic limbs)

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