2009
DOI: 10.1016/j.compstruct.2009.04.013
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Composite electromagnetic interference shielding materials for aerospace applications

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Cited by 168 publications
(99 citation statements)
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“…von Klemperer and Maharaj [29] added copper and aluminium powder fillers to carbon fibre epoxy laminates to improve the electromagnetic shielding capacity of the composite panels. Blast tests on the laminates [30] showed that the laminates with filler particles outperformed their plain composite counterparts, although the margin was small.…”
Section: The Blast Performance Of Plain Compositesmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…von Klemperer and Maharaj [29] added copper and aluminium powder fillers to carbon fibre epoxy laminates to improve the electromagnetic shielding capacity of the composite panels. Blast tests on the laminates [30] showed that the laminates with filler particles outperformed their plain composite counterparts, although the margin was small.…”
Section: The Blast Performance Of Plain Compositesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In addition, there is also the possibility of tailoring the properties of plain composites further by adding particles (such as metallic fillers [29,30], carbon nanotubes [31] or urea formaldehyde [32]) to the composite layers to create multifunctional and selfhealing materials. von Klemperer and Maharaj [29] added copper and aluminium powder fillers to carbon fibre epoxy laminates to improve the electromagnetic shielding capacity of the composite panels.…”
Section: The Blast Performance Of Plain Compositesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Nevertheless, traditional shielding metals, such as copper, nickel, steel and permalloy, suffer from their heavy weight. Hence, the conductive polymer-matrix composites have been developed to replace or supplement traditional shielding metals [6,7]. In spite of their lightweight and easy control of conductivity, most of polymer-matrix composites are not suited to structural applications due to poor mechanical strength [3,5].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As the absorption loss is proportional to shield thickness and is a function of and [9] and by identification with (6), we can say that the first term of (30) represents the absorption loss and the second is the sum of reflection loss and internal multiple reflections .…”
Section: Single Shieldmentioning
confidence: 99%