The Composite Materials of Today and Tomorrow
A special issue of Materials (ISSN 1996-1944). This special issue belongs to the section "Advanced Composites".
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (20 December 2023) | Viewed by 26421
Special Issue Editors
Interests: machines; bioengineering; nuclear power; materials science
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals
Interests: catalysis; carbon nanotubes; hydrogen; environmental chemistry; photodegradation; Li-ion batteries; energy
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals
Interests: photoelectric energy materials and sensing materials; solar-thermal conversion; bio-inspired interface assembly of materials; extraction and application of natural polymer
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
Due to their excellent properties, composite materials, biocomposites, or composites with organic matrixes attract special attention in a number of industries, such as aerospace, automotive, maritime, sports, energy, civil engineering, and electrical fields. These materials are light and non-corrosive, and their amazing properties make them adaptable in various fields, especially due to the wide variety of reinforcements—most often fibrous (glass, carbon, and lignocellulosic) but also non-fibrous (hollow microspheres) and matrices (thermo-rigid or thermoplastic). Composite materials are constantly and reliably evolving.
To date, thermosetting matrices have been the most widely used matrices for structural parts. The use of thermoplastic materials even for large parts is due to their hardness and recyclability in comparison to thermosets. Natural fiber reinforcements have interesting characteristics for secondary parts: they are light, environmentally friendly, relatively cheap, renewable, and with sufficiently high stiffness and strength. Furthermore, to improve out-of-plane thickness properties when needed, 3D composites have been developed.
In recent years, the introduction of multifunctional composite material systems has made it possible to further improve primary functions such as stiffness associated with lightness by combining thermoforming and injection manufacturing processes (over rolled laminates) or impact behavior by using composites reinforced with different types of fibers, some chosen for stiffness and others for damping capacity (carbon and linen).
This Special Issue focuses on the development of new composites, especially multifunctional composites, and the study of their properties (including long-term behavior).
Topics of interest include, but are not limited to, the following:
- New components (die, fittings) and fabrication;
- Composites with silicon, carbon, polymers, rubber, sand, sawdust, glass, plastic, nanoparticles of silver, gold, diamonds, etc.;
- Ecological composite materials (matrix, reinforcements);
- Structural health monitoring (sensors and actuators);
- Biocomposites;
- Meta-composites.
Dr. Florian Ion Tiberiu Petrescu
Prof. Dr. Francisco Márquez
Dr. Gang Shi
Guest Editors
Manuscript Submission Information
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Keywords
- Composite
- Cement
- Concrete
- Nanomaterials
- High-performance composites
- Biocomposites
- Durable, self-healing, eco-friendly composites
- Manufacturing.
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