Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
1593046 | Solid State Communications | 2011 | 4 Pages |
Composites consisting of glass-coated amorphous microwire Co68.59Fe4.84Si12.41B14.16 and 913 E-glass prepregs were designed and fabricated. The influences of tensile stress, annealing and number of composite layers on the giant magneto-impedance (GMI) and giant stress-impedance (GSI) effects in these composites were investigated systematically. It was found that the application of tensile stress along the microwire axis or an increase in the number of composite layers reduced the GMI effect and increased the circular anisotropy field, while the annealing treatment had a reverse effect. The value of matrix–wire interfacial stress calculated via the GMI profiles coincided with the value of the applied effective tensile stress to yield similar GMI profiles. Enhancement of the GSI effect was achieved in the composites relative to their single microwire inclusion. These findings are important for the development of functional microwire-based composites for magnetic- and stress-sensing applications. They also open up a new route for probing the interfacial stress in fibre-reinforced polymer (FRP) composites.
Research highlights► An increase in the number of composite layers reduced the GMI effect. ► The matrix–wire interfacial stress was calculated via the GMI profiles. ► The GSI effect was enhanced in the composites over their single microwire inclusion. ► A new route for probing the interfacial stress is opened up in FRP composites.