Premium
Toward High Strength and High Electrical Conductivity in Super‐Aligned Carbon Nanotubes Reinforced Copper
Author(s) -
Xiong Lunqiao,
Liu Kangwei,
Shuai Jing,
Hou Zecheng,
Zhu Lin,
Li Wenzhen
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
advanced engineering materials
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.938
H-Index - 114
eISSN - 1527-2648
pISSN - 1438-1656
DOI - 10.1002/adem.201700805
Subject(s) - materials science , copper , electrical resistivity and conductivity , composite material , dislocation , carbon nanotube , conductivity , ultimate tensile strength , electrical conductor , accumulative roll bonding , work hardening , metallurgy , microstructure , electrical engineering , chemistry , engineering
The miniaturization of electronic products is drawing higher demand in the strength and conductivity of conductors. This work demonstrates the possibility of substantially increasing the dislocation density in copper to enhance the strength of super‐aligned carbon nanotubes (SACNTs) reinforced copper matrix composites (SACNT/Cu) without compromising the electrical conductivity. High strain is introduced into pure copper and SACNT/Cu by accumulative roll‐bonding (ARB) process up to 16 cycles at ambient temperature. SACNTs with initial laminated distribution turn out to be dispersed uniformly with maintained directional arrangement inside the copper matrix after ARB, which can then effectively block the motion of dislocations. Therefore, large number of dislocations propagated by large strains can be accumulated without subdivision. The accumulated dislocations will result into strain hardening, which is the major strengthening mechanism in SACNT/Cu after ARB. Furthermore, the contribution of dislocations to resistivity increase is little, thus maintaining high electrical conductivity. As a result, a high tensile strength (505 MPa) combined with a high electrical conductivity (90% IACS) is achieved in large‐sized composite sheet.