Embodiments of the present invention relate to colored metal. In particular, they relate to a metal composite that is colored throughout.
At present color is applied to metal in an unsatisfactory manner.
The color is typically applied by anodizing, plating or adding an outer coating of paint or adding a physical vapor deposition (PVD) layer. These colorations are susceptible to wear with subsequent loss of coloration where, for example, the outer coloration is lost or damaged.
The inventors have been able to successfully integrate colored particles within a metal matrix to form a colored metal composite.
According to various, but not necessarily all, embodiments of the invention there is provided a colored metal composite comprising: a metal matrix; and colored particles distributed throughout the metal matrix.
According to various, but not necessarily all, embodiments of the invention there is provided a method comprising: providing metal powder as a first phase of a composite; providing colored particles to form a second phase of the composite; mixing the metal powder and colored particles; and sintering the metal powder around the colored particles to form a metal matrix that has colored particles distributed throughout.
According to various, but not necessarily all, embodiments of the invention there is provided a colored part made from colored metal that is colored throughout wherein the colored metal forms a presentation surface of the colored part and wherein removal of a portion of the presentation surface of the colored part reveals colored metal.
According to various, but not necessarily all, embodiments of the invention there is provided a method comprising: creating colored metal that is colored throughout; and working the colored metal.
For a better understanding of various examples of embodiments of the present invention reference will now be made by way of example only to the accompanying drawings in which:
In this example, the metal matrix 4 is a sintered metal matrix formed by sintering metal powder. The metal matrix 4 may, for example, be formed from any suitable metal. One suitable class of metals is engineering metals such as aluminum, steel, or titanium. Another suitable class of metals is precious metals such as gold and silver.
The concentration of colored particles 6 in the metal matrix 4 may be any suitable concentration and a suitable concentration can be experimentally determined. A suitable concentration may lie within the range 25 to 50% by volume or may lie outside that range. The colored particles may be evenly distributed throughout the metal matrix 4. The colored particles will then have a surface density at any surface of the colored metal composite 2 that is consistent. The surface density at the surface may be any suitable density and a suitable density can be experimentally determined. A suitable density may lie within the range 25 to 50% colored particles by surface area or outside that range. A suitable density may be one that is sufficient to give the colored metal composite a consistent hue to the human eye.
The colored particles 6 may have a size between 1 μm and 100 μm. The colored particles 6 may be discrete individual particles in the metal matrix 4.
The colored particles 6 are inert at the sintering point of the metal matrix 4 and, in this example, have a melting point that is higher than the sintering point of the metal matrix.
This requirement for inertness and stability at high temperature means that ionic compounds particularly oxides are good candidates for use as the colored particles as are minerals particularly metamorphic minerals and gemstones. Some covalent compounds or elements may also be good candidates, such as diamond.
The colored particles may be inherently colored as opposed to pigmented by a separate phase. In this case, a base material may incorporate structural modifications. The structural modifications are modifications to the structure of the base material e.g. an impurity or dopant replaces an atom of the structure of the base material, or an atom of the structure of the base material is missing at a defect. The base material may be clear (transparent) without structural modifications but strongly colored with structural modifications.
In some embodiments, the base material of a particle is a single crystal and the structural modifications may be dopants integrated within the crystal lattice, naturally occurring impurities integrated within the crystal lattice or defects in the crystal lattice. For synthetic single crystals, the color of the particle is controlled by the choice of base material and dopant or defect.
In some embodiments, the base material of a particle is a non-crystalline (e.g. amorphous) or polycrystalline transparent material such as glass, glass-ceramics, fused silica, transparent ceramics. The structural modifications are dopants integrated as part of the base material's structure
The colored particles 6 in the metal matrix 4 may comprise only a single type of base material rather than a mixture of different types of base material. However, in some applications, a mixture of different types of colored particles 6 may be integrated within the metal matrix 4.
Suitable single crystal types include, for example, any of: sapphire (Al203 corundum), cubic zirconia (ZrO2), YAG (yttrium aluminium garnet, Y3Al5O12), spinel (AlMg2O4), and diamond.
The single crystals used as the colored particles 6 may be synthetic crystals and/or they may be natural crystals. Natural crystals are colored by naturally occurring impurities (dopants) in the crystal.
The single crystals used as the colored particles 6 may be allochromatic. Allochromatism is the coloration caused by the presence of a trace element or impurity that is foreign to a crystal lattice. Allochromatic coloration may, for example, be caused by electrons from “transition metal” trace impurities (dopants) found within crystalline structures. In synthetic crystals, the trace impurities may be deliberately added to the crystal lattice as dopants where they become integrated within the crystal lattice of the single crystals. The single crystals may be clear (transparent) when undoped but strongly colored when doped. Suitable transition metal dopants include any of: chrome, titanium, iron, neodymium, erbium, nickel, cobalt, copper, vanadium.
The single crystals used as the colored particles 6 may be idiochromatic. Idiochromatism occurs when the presence of essential or major constituents within the mineral's crystal lattice determine which wavelengths of light are reflected and which are absorbed, determining color.
A particular color may be achieved by using colored particles 6 that are formed from the correct combination of single crystal and dopant and/or single crystal and defect.
The table below indicates what colors are achievable for different combinations of single crystal and dopant and for different combinations of single crystal and defect. The single crystals include cubic zirconia, sapphire, spinel, YAG and diamond. The table is intended to be representative, not exhaustive.
A particular color may be achieved by using colored particles 6 that are formed from the correct combination of single crystal and defect. For example, an imperfect carbon lattice may be colored pink, purple or yellow. The imperfect carbon lattice can be formed by introducing defects into diamond using heat treatment and/or irradiation.
Although specific examples of particles comprising combinations of base material and structural modifications have been described, further new combinations are expected to be systematically developed. Suitable constraint for defining a reduced ‘search space’ in which suitable colored particles are identifiable include: the colored particles 6 are inert at the appropriate processing temperature of the colored metal e.g. at the sintering point of the metal matrix 4.
An additional constraint may be that the colored particles 6 have a melting point that is higher than the processing temperature.
An additional constraint may be that the colored particles are inherently colored by structural modifications within the structure of a base material
The method 10 comprises:
at block 11 metal powder is provided as a first phase of a composite;
at block 12 colored particles 6 are provided as a second phase of the composite;
at block 13 the composite metal powder and colored particles are mixed;
at block 14 the metal powder is sintered around the colored particles to form a metal matrix 4 that has colored particles 6 distributed throughout.
The sintering is solid state sintering which joins or coalesces the metal powder without melting the metal. The sintering point varies from metal to metal. For aluminum it may be between 500-550° C. For steel it may be between 1200-1300° C. For titanium it may be between 900-1200° C.
In one embodiment, the metal powder and colored particles may be mixed in a crucible or furnace. During sintering, heat is applied to the mixture of the metal powder and colored particles. Pressure may also be applied to aid the sintering process.
In another embodiment, metal powder from one feed and colored particles from another feed are evenly distributed in a mixture and then laser sintered or electron beam sintered.
Although sintering of the metal powder is preferred, in may be possible to also partially or fully melt the metal and also achieve a colored metal composite, In this example, the colored particles 6 should be inert at the maximum temperature used. The colored particles may also have a melting point that is higher than the maximum temperature used.
It should be noted that the colored particles 6 are evenly distributed throughout the colored metal composite 2 include the interior of the colored metal composite.
The removal of a portion 24 of the presentation surface 22 of the colored part 20 reveals colored metal 4 irrespective of the size of the portion removed. A scratch through the presentation surface 22 is substantially inconspicuous as a result of the presence of the colored metal throughout the colored exterior body. Once scratched, the presentation surface 20 can be easily repaired by re-polishing.
The colored part 20 is suitable for use as a body part for a vehicle such as a car. The colored part 20 may also be suitable for use as a body part for metal items that are subject to wear by contact such as latches, utensils, etc.
The colored part 20 is suitable for use as a cover or housing. It may therefore find application as a cover for an electronic device such as a laptop, a mobile cellular telephone, a personal music player, a personal digital assistant, a e-book reader, a television set, a console etc.
Referring back to
The blocks illustrated in the Figs may represent steps in a method. The illustration of a particular order to the steps does not necessarily imply that there is a required or preferred order for the steps and the order and arrangement of the steps may be varied. Furthermore, it may be possible for some steps to be omitted or added.
Although embodiments of the present invention have been described in the preceding paragraphs with reference to various examples, it should be appreciated that modifications to the examples given can be made without departing from the scope of the invention as claimed.
Features described in the preceding description may be used in combinations other than the combinations explicitly described.
Although functions have been described with reference to certain features, those functions may be performable by other features whether described or not.
Although features have been described with reference to certain embodiments, those features may also be present in other embodiments whether described or not.
Whilst endeavoring in the foregoing specification to draw attention to those features of the invention believed to be of particular importance it should be understood that the Applicant claims protection in respect of any patentable feature or combination of features hereinbefore referred to and/or shown in the drawings whether or not particular emphasis has been placed thereon.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20110159216 A1 | Jun 2011 | US |