By combining controlled experiments on single interfaces with measurements on solitary bubbles and liquid foams, we show that poly( N-isopropylacrylamide) (PNIPAM) microgels assembled at air/water interfaces exhibit a solid to liquid transition changing the temperature, and that this is associated with the change in the interfacial microstructure of the PNIPAM particles around their volume phase transition temperature. We show that the solid behaves as a soft 2D colloidal glass, and that the existence of this solid/liquid transition offers an ideal platform to tune the permeability of air bubbles covered by PNIPAM and to control macroscopic foam properties such as drainage, stability, and foamability. PNIPAM particles on fluid interfaces allow new tunable materials, for example foam structures with variable mechanical properties upon small temperature changes.
Nowadays, research on additive manufacturing of Ti6Al4V alloy is growing exponentially but there are just a few studies about additive manufacturing of metal matrix composite components. In this work, highly reinforced Ti6Al4V matrix composites with SiC particles have been additively manufactured by direct laser deposition (DLD). Ti6Al4V powder and SiC particles have been deposited layer by layer to form an additive thin wall structure. The geometry, microstructure, and microhardness of the samples are strongly influenced by the laser scanning speed used during de fabrication process. In addition, the effect of the SiC increment in reinforcement concentrations and the influence of SiC particle sizes in the microstructure have been evaluated, and the reaction mechanisms have been established. The percentage of reinforcement measured is lower than expected due to the reinforcement-matrix reactivity that results in partially dissolved SiC particles and the formation of a TiC and Si5Ti3 ring around them. The size and number of particles and reaction products depend on the initial size and percentage of reinforcement and the DLD scanning speed. The higher the size and percentage of SiC particles and reaction products in the matrix, the higher the hardening effect of the composite matrix.
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The difficulty of getting a correct distribution of the reinforcement in the metal matrix and the complexity for achieving a good-metallurgy matrix-reinforcement bonding has limited the development of additive manufacturing of metal matrix composites. This research proposes the use of a reactive atmosphere during the fabrication process to obtain titanium matrix composites reinforced with TiN. The relation between the carrying gas and the process parameters used with the presence of porous and defects, the microstructure, and microhardness has been obtained. Nitrogen was used as the carrying gas of the titanium powder. Under laser irradiation, the particles melt and react with nitrogen, resulting in the formation of a titanium matrix composite highly reinforced with TiN. The composite obtained had a microhardness increase between 50 and 100% in comparison with titanium samples fabricated in the same conditions in an argon atmosphere. Three reaction mechanisms have been proposed to take place in the microstructure, depending on the amount of nitrogen in the titanium particles, and its diffusion in them during the manufacture.
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