| Literature DB >> 32441499 |
Amol V Pansare1, Shraddha Y Chhatre2, Shyam R Khairkar3, Jeffrey G Bell4, Michel Barbezat1, Subhananda Chakrabarti5, Amit A Nagarkar4.
Abstract
Fiber-reinforced composites have become the material of choice for aerospace structures because of their favorable strength-to-weight ratio. Given the increasing amounts of counterfeit composite parts showing up in the complex aerospace supply chain, it is absolutely vital to track a composite part throughout its lifecycle-from production to usage and to disposal. Existing barcoding methods are invasive, affect the structural properties of composites, and/or are vulnerable to tampering. We describe a universal method to store information in fiber-reinforced composites based on solid-state in situ reduction leading to embedded nanoparticles with controlled morphologies. This simple, cost-effective, mild, surfactant-free, and one-step protocol for the fabrication of embedded platinum nanostructures leads to morphology-based barcodes for polymeric composites. We also describe a coding methodology wherein a 1 × 1 cm code can represent 3.4 billion parts to 95 trillion parts, depending on the resolution required along with access to morphology-based chemical encryption systems.Entities:
Keywords: barcoding; chemical encryption; epoxy composites; nanoparticle morphology control; solid-state synthesis
Year: 2020 PMID: 32441499 DOI: 10.1021/acsami.0c05314
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ISSN: 1944-8244 Impact factor: 9.229