Aluminide conductivity

Discussion in 'General Discussion' started by dangerman, Jan 20, 2012.

  1. dangerman
    dangerman Member
    Quick question on Aluminide. I have been asked to look into a project that needs to conduct a very very small amount of electricity....actually to conduct generated static away...... Does Aluminide conduct given that it is metallic powder mix?
     
  2. stonysmith
    stonysmith Well-Known Member Moderator
    Definitly non-conductive... I've tested it. The aluminum powder is mixed in with / suspended in nylon. There is a random chance that a string of aluminum particles could line up, but the odds are extremely low.
     
  3. dangerman
    dangerman Member
    Thanks for the prompt reply... Especially as its based on your own tests!.
     
  4. You might look at other rapid prototyping companies that offer carbon loaded SLS materials. These are exactly what you're looking for.
     
  5. 2347_deleted
    2347_deleted Member
    Carbon-loaded SLS has exactly the same problem as the Alumide, not enough conductive material to ensure there is always a conductive pathway. (In general, getting conduction through plastics is challenging as there is an upper limit to the amount of additive you can put in before it starts to alter the other properties, typically in a way which will prevent good processing).

    If possible, your best option might be the post-process metal plating as mentioned elsewhere in the forum. Look up the company 3DDC for example here.

    Simon
     
  6. dangerman
    dangerman Member
    Thanks for all the replies. I've now got a few Things to research. However, the original intention was to keep the cost down. We might have to go for metal parts within my assembly.
     
  7. Simon - This is factually incorrect. Perhaps you are thinking of the PA-640 GSL powder which has carbon fiber in it for reinforcement rather than electrostatic dissipation. The carbon fiber doesn't percolate so no conduction current.

    OP - You want to use NyTek 1200 CF which uses carbon black which will percolate. Here is a data sheet from a company that would build the part that you desire:

    https://www.solidconcepts.com/content/pdfs/SLS_NyTek_1200_CF _Material_Specifications.pdf

    If you look at its volume resistivity this is more than sufficient to dissipate most forms of charge build up. Check your spec for required dissipation rate and use the included volume resistivity to design your part to eliminate your expected charge build up rate.