EP0289193A1 - Pressure responsive electrically conductive materials - Google Patents

Pressure responsive electrically conductive materials Download PDF

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Publication number
EP0289193A1
EP0289193A1 EP88303516A EP88303516A EP0289193A1 EP 0289193 A1 EP0289193 A1 EP 0289193A1 EP 88303516 A EP88303516 A EP 88303516A EP 88303516 A EP88303516 A EP 88303516A EP 0289193 A1 EP0289193 A1 EP 0289193A1
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EP
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Prior art keywords
particles
silicon
electrically conductive
material according
conductive
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EP88303516A
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German (de)
French (fr)
Inventor
Alan C. Bickley
George Dunnet
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Gates Rubber Co Ltd
Gates Rubber Co
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Gates Rubber Co Ltd
Gates Rubber Co
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Publication of EP0289193A1 publication Critical patent/EP0289193A1/en
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    • HELECTRICITY
    • H01ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
    • H01BCABLES; CONDUCTORS; INSULATORS; SELECTION OF MATERIALS FOR THEIR CONDUCTIVE, INSULATING OR DIELECTRIC PROPERTIES
    • H01B1/00Conductors or conductive bodies characterised by the conductive materials; Selection of materials as conductors
    • H01B1/20Conductive material dispersed in non-conductive organic material
    • H01B1/24Conductive material dispersed in non-conductive organic material the conductive material comprising carbon-silicon compounds, carbon or silicon
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H01ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
    • H01CRESISTORS
    • H01C10/00Adjustable resistors
    • H01C10/10Adjustable resistors adjustable by mechanical pressure or force
    • H01C10/106Adjustable resistors adjustable by mechanical pressure or force on resistive material dispersed in an elastic material

Definitions

  • This invention relates to pressure sensitive electrically conductive materials.
  • Many composite materials have now been proposed based on the mixing of electrically conductive particles into an electrically insulating elastomer which is subsequently shaped and cured.
  • the resultant product is electrically non-­conductive, but is rendered conductive when the material is deformed.
  • GB-A-2192186 discloses a pressure sensitive electrically conductive material comprising a non-conductive matrix of flexible elastomeric material, the matrix containing electrically conductive particles, all such particles being particles of silicon.
  • silicon-­loaded elastomer in accordance with GB-A-2192186 can very simply be prepared to exhibit required resistance/pressure characteristics, merely by simple changes of such variables as filler loading and sheet thickness.
  • Pressure sensitive elements may thus readily be prepared that will, for example, have high sensitivity at low pressures or low sensitivity over wide pressure ranges.
  • a pressure sensitive electrically conductive material comprises a non-conductive matrix of flexible elastomeric material, the matrix containing electrically conductive particles, some of which particles are silicon and others of which are particles of at least one other electrically conductive material, in which at least 70% of the conductive particles are particles of silicon.
  • the replacement particles desirably include at least some graphite particles.
  • the preferred conductive particles that are now incorporated into the elastomeric matrix comprise, by weight, 70% to 99% silicon particles, 1% to 30% graphite particles, and 0% to 29% (more preferably 0% to 10%) of other electrically conductive particles.
  • the aforesaid US patents Nos 3806471 and 4028276 do not teach the use of silicon in excess of 70% by weight, and do not suggest the silicon-graphite blends that have now been found particularly effective.
  • the silicon used in the invention is preferably in powdered form with the particles having a size range of from 1 to 300 microns, although it may be more desirable to avoid particles having a size in excess of 200 microns.
  • the preferred range of particle sizes is from 1 to 150 microns.
  • the silicon is preferably undoped, i.e. it has not been treated to incorporate trace impurities of the materials usually used in silicon semi-conductors. Freely available chemical grade silicon powder has been found perfectly satisfactory for use in the invention.
  • the graphite is desirably artificial graphite that has been ground to very fine particle sizes, desirably to a size range of from 0.1 to 100 microns, more preferably 0.1 to 50 microns.
  • conductive (which term is used herein to include semi-conductive)powders that may be incorporated into the blend include silver, tellurium and molybdenum disulphide. Desirably they do not constitute more than 10% by weight of the conductive powder.
  • the conductive particles make up between 30% and 60% of the volume of the material.
  • the particles preferably are present in from 100 to 300 parts per hundred parts by weight of matrix material (phr). Below the preferred lower limits, it may be found that unacceptably high compression needs to be applied to the material to cause the required drop in resistance, while above the upper limit the material in its state of rest may be found to be too conductive due to contact between the conductive particles.
  • the elastomeric matrix may be formed from any suitable polymeric material or blend thereof as long as it is electrically insulating and exhibits the required properties.
  • suitable elastomers are silicone rubbers, whether of the condensation reaction, addition reaction or vinyl group-containing type, rubbery condensation polymers such as polyurethane rubber obtained by reaction of polyisocyanates with polyalkylene glycols, ethylene propylene-non-conjugated diene rubbers, natural rubber, synthetic polyisoprene rubber, styrene butadiene rubber, nitrile-butadiene rubber, halogenated hydrocarbon rubbers such as elastomeric chloroprene rubber, fluoroolefin rubber, chlorosulfonated polyethylene, thermoplastic elastomers such as ethylene-vinyl acetate copolymers, and plasticizer containing thermoplastic resins.
  • non-conductive materials such as solvents, plasticising agents, stabilizers, pigments, colouring agents and extending oils may be incorporated into the matrix composition.
  • Such composition may contain fillers such as silica, silicates, kaolin, mica, talc, carbonates or alumina.
  • the matrix material should be compounded so that it can resist a high-intensity electric field, has good electrically insulating properties and the mechanical properties appropriate to the end use. In some cases these properties include low permanent set and high elongation at break. In other fields it may be advantageous for the matrix to be of cellular material, and any suitable blowing agent or other expanding system may then be compounded with the elastomer.
  • Solvent levels may be adjusted to provide a material capable of being worked in a particular way to give a finished product.
  • silicone elastomers without solvent may be moulded or spread, with moderate levels of solvent added they may be cast, and with high levels of solvent they may be screen printed or painted onto a suitable substrate.
  • the conductive particles and any other required materials may be mixed with the elastomeric matrix material in any suitable manner. Mixing is facilitated if the matrix material is in liquid form, (whether using solvent or not) however, it is possible to effect mixing into a solid elastomer. The aim will often be to obtain a reasonably uniform dispersion of the conductive particles throughout the matrix. After mixing, a cross-linking system is added to the mixture which is then cured to any required shape. The cured material may be de-gassed if necessary. For many uses a room temperature vulcanising material is used, for ease in compounding and casting and for better control of particle distribution. When materials with better mechanical properties are required, however, high temperature vulcanising materials may be used. Alternatively, the properties of room temperature vulcanising materials may be improved by appropriate compounding ingredients.
  • a silicone or a polyurethane rubber which can readily be compounded to give the required properties, and can be vulcanised at room temperature.
  • the material will be cured in the form of a thin flat sheet, which may then be cut into individual elements of required size.
  • Preferred sheet thicknesses are from 0.15 to 3 mm, more preferably from 0.2 to 1.5 mm. It is important that any given element be of substantially uniform thickness within a close tolerance, eg. 1%. Elements moulded from identical compositions and under identical conditions but to different thicknesses are found to have widely different electrical characteristics.
  • the material can be applied by screen printing or painting, onto a suitable substrate where it is subsequently cured.
  • the viscosity of the material must be low for this process to be successfully applied and this can be achieved by the addition of solvent.
  • suitable substrates include polyethyleneterephthalate and polyester (e.g. Mylar) film and metal foils.
  • a conductive layer such as conductive metal foil or a layer of conductive ink on a Mylar film. This results in a larger resistance range being achieved, together with a lower loaded resistance.
  • the material can be cured on the inner surface of a revolving drum. If the drum surface is concentric with the axis of rotation then sheets of accurately controlled thickness can be obtained. The process is improved if the viscosity of the material is first reduced by the addition of solvent. The solvent allows the material to distribute evenly over the drum surface, and the solvent then evaporates before the material cures. The final properties of the sheet depend upon the material composition, the rotation speed, drum size, viscosity and relative densities of the different filler particles and matrix material.
  • a batch of material was made up from Ambersil Silcoset 105 RTV (a room temperature vulcanising silicone rubber) together with undoped, chemical grade silicon powder supplied by BDH Chemicals Limited under their reference 30066 and synthetic graphite powder also supplied by BDH Chemicals Limited under their reference 26109.
  • the particle size of the silicon powder was such that 1.9% by weight was retained on a 100 mesh sieve, 53.1% by weight retained on a 200 mesh sieve, 21.1% by weight retained on a 300 mesh sieve, 16.8% by weight retained on a 425 mesh sieve and the remaining 7.1% passed through the 425 mesh sieve.
  • Mesh sizes are given according to ASTM E11. This represents a range of particle sizes that is roughly from 160 to 10 microns.
  • the graphite had particle sizes in the range of 0.1 to 50 microns.
  • the resulting mixture was then cast into a mould to produce sheets of nominal thickness 0.5 mm.
  • PSA529 adhesive a silicone based liquid rubber
  • cure systems available from Siltac Limited of Manchester, were diluted with 200 parts toluene, then 50 parts graphite and 150 parts silicone were mechanically mixed into the adhesive.
  • the mixture was then applied to a Mylar film by a screen printing technique. This produced a layer of 0.07 mm which was allowed to cure.
  • the electrode consisted of silver ink tracks 1 mm wide with 1 mm spacings. Each alternate pair of tracks were electrically connected, so that two electrically insulated electrodes were produced.
  • Material was prepared and cast as in example 2 but with the addition of 20 parts of silver powder of nominal particle size 1 - 20 micron.

Abstract

A pressure sensitive electrically conductive material comprising a non-conductive matrix of flexible elastomeric material, the matrix containing electrically conductive particles, some of which particles are silicon and others of which are particles of at least one other electrically conductive material, in which at least 70% of the conductive particles are particles of silicon.

Description

  • This invention relates to pressure sensitive electrically conductive materials. Many composite materials have now been proposed based on the mixing of electrically conductive particles into an electrically insulating elastomer which is subsequently shaped and cured. The resultant product is electrically non-­conductive, but is rendered conductive when the material is deformed.
  • The principal workers in the field of these materials have all recognised the difficulties in providing an industrially acceptable material, and there are only a few manufacturers in the world who produce pressure responsive conductors on an industrial scale. Various problems that have been noted are lack of uniform electrical characteristics, inadequate mechanical strength and durability, undue variations in electrical properties of the material with repeated pressure applications and delay in electrical response. Such difficulties, and brief surveys of the developments of this type of material are described in the patent literature in such specifications as GB-A-1561189, US-A-4302361, US-A-4138369, US-A-4028276 and US-A-3806471.
  • Those specifications are all concerned with the selection of electrically conductive materials for incorporation into an elastomeric matrix and the method of incorporating the conductive materials in order to obtain an acceptable product. Many of the products described therein will form a material that is suitable for use in a switching context, that is a material which exhibits a rapid and large drop in resistance when the pressure applied thereto reaches a certain level. Below that level the high resistance of the material makes it an effective insulator, while above the level the resistance drops to a figure such that the material is an effective conductor. Such materials are thus ideal for use as pressure-sensitive switches. However, none of the known prior art has put forward a practical proposal for an inexpensive pressure sensitive material that will exhibit a resistance or conductivity curve that exhibits a gradual change over a wide range of applied pressures, thus being capable of providing an electrical output signal that is a smooth function of applied pressure. The invention seeks to provide a pressure responsive electrically conductive material that possesses this important property, and that can also be compounded to meet common industrial requirements for this type of material.
  • Our co-pending application published as GB-A-2192186 discloses a pressure sensitive electrically conductive material comprising a non-conductive matrix of flexible elastomeric material, the matrix containing electrically conductive particles, all such particles being particles of silicon.
  • There had been earlier proposals to incorporate silicon into a pressure sensitive electrically conductive material, but only in combination with other electrically conductive particles. Thus, US-A-3806471 suggests that silicon particles can be combined with copper aluminium or iron particles, and US-A-4028276 discloses that silicon particles can be used in conjunction with particles of such conductive materials as titanium carbide and mixtures of cobalt and molybdenum. In each case the resulting materials were suitable for switch applications, exhibiting a rapid drop in resistance when a given pressure level is reached. There was no suggestion in either document that silicon could be used alone as the conductive material, and it was most surprising to find that when it is so used the resulting filled matrix has the property that resistance was a smooth function of applied pressure over a wide pressure range. Furthermore, it was found that silicon-­loaded elastomer in accordance with GB-A-2192186 can very simply be prepared to exhibit required resistance/pressure characteristics, merely by simple changes of such variables as filler loading and sheet thickness. Pressure sensitive elements may thus readily be prepared that will, for example, have high sensitivity at low pressures or low sensitivity over wide pressure ranges.
  • Further work has now unexpected established that equally good results can be obtained, and the useful range of elements extended, by replacing no more than 30% by weight of the conductive particles with particles of a material other than silicon.
  • According to the present invention, therefore, a pressure sensitive electrically conductive material comprises a non-conductive matrix of flexible elastomeric material, the matrix containing electrically conductive particles, some of which particles are silicon and others of which are particles of at least one other electrically conductive material, in which at least 70% of the conductive particles are particles of silicon.
  • The replacement particles desirably include at least some graphite particles. Thus, the preferred conductive particles that are now incorporated into the elastomeric matrix comprise, by weight, 70% to 99% silicon particles, 1% to 30% graphite particles, and 0% to 29% (more preferably 0% to 10%) of other electrically conductive particles. The aforesaid US patents Nos 3806471 and 4028276 do not teach the use of silicon in excess of 70% by weight, and do not suggest the silicon-graphite blends that have now been found particularly effective. The silicon used in the invention is preferably in powdered form with the particles having a size range of from 1 to 300 microns, although it may be more desirable to avoid particles having a size in excess of 200 microns. The preferred range of particle sizes is from 1 to 150 microns.
  • The silicon is preferably undoped, i.e. it has not been treated to incorporate trace impurities of the materials usually used in silicon semi-conductors. Freely available chemical grade silicon powder has been found perfectly satisfactory for use in the invention.
  • The graphite is desirably artificial graphite that has been ground to very fine particle sizes, desirably to a size range of from 0.1 to 100 microns, more preferably 0.1 to 50 microns.
  • Other conductive (which term is used herein to include semi-conductive)powders that may be incorporated into the blend include silver, tellurium and molybdenum disulphide. Desirably they do not constitute more than 10% by weight of the conductive powder.
  • Preferably the conductive particles make up between 30% and 60% of the volume of the material. Alternatively or additionally the particles preferably are present in from 100 to 300 parts per hundred parts by weight of matrix material (phr). Below the preferred lower limits, it may be found that unacceptably high compression needs to be applied to the material to cause the required drop in resistance, while above the upper limit the material in its state of rest may be found to be too conductive due to contact between the conductive particles.
  • The elastomeric matrix may be formed from any suitable polymeric material or blend thereof as long as it is electrically insulating and exhibits the required properties. Representative of suitable elastomers are silicone rubbers, whether of the condensation reaction, addition reaction or vinyl group-containing type, rubbery condensation polymers such as polyurethane rubber obtained by reaction of polyisocyanates with polyalkylene glycols, ethylene propylene-non-conjugated diene rubbers, natural rubber, synthetic polyisoprene rubber, styrene butadiene rubber, nitrile-butadiene rubber, halogenated hydrocarbon rubbers such as elastomeric chloroprene rubber, fluoroolefin rubber, chlorosulfonated polyethylene, thermoplastic elastomers such as ethylene-vinyl acetate copolymers, and plasticizer containing thermoplastic resins.
  • Other non-conductive materials such as solvents, plasticising agents, stabilizers, pigments, colouring agents and extending oils may be incorporated into the matrix composition. Such composition may contain fillers such as silica, silicates, kaolin, mica, talc, carbonates or alumina. Generally speaking, the matrix material should be compounded so that it can resist a high-intensity electric field, has good electrically insulating properties and the mechanical properties appropriate to the end use. In some cases these properties include low permanent set and high elongation at break. In other fields it may be advantageous for the matrix to be of cellular material, and any suitable blowing agent or other expanding system may then be compounded with the elastomer. Solvent levels may be adjusted to provide a material capable of being worked in a particular way to give a finished product. For example, silicone elastomers without solvent may be moulded or spread, with moderate levels of solvent added they may be cast, and with high levels of solvent they may be screen printed or painted onto a suitable substrate.
  • The conductive particles and any other required materials may be mixed with the elastomeric matrix material in any suitable manner. Mixing is facilitated if the matrix material is in liquid form, (whether using solvent or not) however, it is possible to effect mixing into a solid elastomer. The aim will often be to obtain a reasonably uniform dispersion of the conductive particles throughout the matrix. After mixing, a cross-linking system is added to the mixture which is then cured to any required shape. The cured material may be de-gassed if necessary. For many uses a room temperature vulcanising material is used, for ease in compounding and casting and for better control of particle distribution. When materials with better mechanical properties are required, however, high temperature vulcanising materials may be used. Alternatively, the properties of room temperature vulcanising materials may be improved by appropriate compounding ingredients.
  • It is particularly preferred to use a silicone or a polyurethane rubber, which can readily be compounded to give the required properties, and can be vulcanised at room temperature.
  • Most usually the material will be cured in the form of a thin flat sheet, which may then be cut into individual elements of required size. Preferred sheet thicknesses are from 0.15 to 3 mm, more preferably from 0.2 to 1.5 mm. It is important that any given element be of substantially uniform thickness within a close tolerance, eg. 1%. Elements moulded from identical compositions and under identical conditions but to different thicknesses are found to have widely different electrical characteristics.
  • As already stated, the material can be applied by screen printing or painting, onto a suitable substrate where it is subsequently cured. The viscosity of the material must be low for this process to be successfully applied and this can be achieved by the addition of solvent. Examples of suitable substrates include polyethyleneterephthalate and polyester (e.g. Mylar) film and metal foils. In some applications where the material is to be laid over a grid electrode there is advantage in printing the material onto a conductive layer such as conductive metal foil or a layer of conductive ink on a Mylar film. This results in a larger resistance range being achieved, together with a lower loaded resistance.
  • In a further alternative, the material can be cured on the inner surface of a revolving drum. If the drum surface is concentric with the axis of rotation then sheets of accurately controlled thickness can be obtained. The process is improved if the viscosity of the material is first reduced by the addition of solvent. The solvent allows the material to distribute evenly over the drum surface, and the solvent then evaporates before the material cures. The final properties of the sheet depend upon the material composition, the rotation speed, drum size, viscosity and relative densities of the different filler particles and matrix material.
  • The invention will now be described in more detail with reference to the following examples, and with reference to figures 1 to 3 of the accompanying drawings which are graphs of the pressure resistance characteristics of the exemplified materials.
  • EXAMPLE 1
  • A batch of material was made up from Ambersil Silcoset 105 RTV (a room temperature vulcanising silicone rubber) together with undoped, chemical grade silicon powder supplied by BDH Chemicals Limited under their reference 30066 and synthetic graphite powder also supplied by BDH Chemicals Limited under their reference 26109. The particle size of the silicon powder was such that 1.9% by weight was retained on a 100 mesh sieve, 53.1% by weight retained on a 200 mesh sieve, 21.1% by weight retained on a 300 mesh sieve, 16.8% by weight retained on a 425 mesh sieve and the remaining 7.1% passed through the 425 mesh sieve. Mesh sizes are given according to ASTM E11. This represents a range of particle sizes that is roughly from 160 to 10 microns. The graphite had particle sizes in the range of 0.1 to 50 microns.
  • Mixing was effected as follows: 100 parts by weight of the silicon rubber and curing agent were diluted with 100 parts of toluene. 30 parts of graphite and 150 parts of silicon were then added and mechanically mixed into the silicone rubber.
  • The resulting mixture was then cast into a mould to produce sheets of nominal thickness 0.5 mm.
  • When cured a 1 cm² piece of the material was placed over two copper track electrodes and the electrical resistance between the tracks monitored. The copper tracks were 1 mm wide with a 1 mm spacing between them and they had been laminated to a polyester film backing material. The resistance was monitored as loads were applied to the unit. The results are shown in table 1.
  • EXAMPLE 2 - 5
  • The method of production and test of example 1 was repeated with graphite loadings ranging from 30 to 60 parts and silicon loadings ranging from 150 to 200 parts. The compositions and measured resistance values are shown in table 1.
    Figure imgb0001
  • EXAMPLE 6
  • 100 parts of silicone rubber and curing agent were mixed with 100 parts of toluene, 100 parts silicon and 30 parts graphite. The resulting mixture was cast into a drum of diameter 25 cms which was rotating at 200 revolutions per minute.
  • After the material had cured it was removed from the inner surface of the drum and tested in the same manner as example 1.
  • It was found that the two surfaces of the material had different properties. The side which had been adjacent to the drum showed the higher resistance and the greater resistance range. The results for the two surfaces are shown in table 2.
  • EXAMPLE 7 - 9
  • The method of production in sample 6 was repeated with different toluene levels.
  • The sample surfaces which had been adjacent to the drum were tested as in example 1 and the results are shown in table 2.
    Figure imgb0002
  • EXAMPLE
  • 100 parts of PSA529 adhesive (a silicone based liquid rubber) with cure systems added, available from Siltac Limited of Manchester, were diluted with 200 parts toluene, then 50 parts graphite and 150 parts silicone were mechanically mixed into the adhesive.
  • The mixture was then applied to a Mylar film by a screen printing technique. This produced a layer of 0.07 mm which was allowed to cure.
  • Following cure a 10 cm square was cut from the Mylar sheet. This piece was then placed adhesive side down over a grid electrode. The electrode consisted of silver ink tracks 1 mm wide with 1 mm spacings. Each alternate pair of tracks were electrically connected, so that two electrically insulated electrodes were produced.
  • The resistance between the two electrodes was monitored as loads were applied to 1 cm² of the unit. The results are shown in table 3.
    Figure imgb0003
  • EXAMPLE 11
  • Material was prepared and cast as in example 2 but with the addition of 20 parts of silver powder of nominal particle size 1 - 20 micron.
  • The material was tested as for example 2 and the results shown in table 4.
    Figure imgb0004
  • It will be appreciated from the examples that the compound, formation method and sheet thickness can readily be tailored for specific applications. The tables illustrate the smooth resistance variation over a wide load range that are obtainable with the materials of the invention.

Claims (13)

1. A pressure sensitive electrically conductive material comprising a non-conductive material of flexible elastomeric material, the matrix containing electrically conductive particles, some of which particles are silicon and others of which are particles of at least one other electrically conductive material, in which at least 70% of the conductive particles are particles of silicon.
2. A material according to claim 1 in which at least some of the other particles are particles of graphite.
3. A material according to claim 1 or claim 2 in which the electrically conductive particles comprise, by weight, 70% to 99% silicon, 1% to 30% graphite and 0% to 29% of other electrically conductive material.
4. A material according to claim 3 in which the other electrically conductive material is selected from silver, tellurium and molybdenum disulphide.
5. A material according to claim 1 in which the conductive particles comprise, by weight, 70% to 85% silicon and correspondingly 30% to 15% graphite.
6. A material according to any one of the preceding claims in which the silicon is in powdered form, the particles having a size range of from 1 to 300 microns, preferably from 1 to 150 microns.
7. A material according to any one of the preceding claims in which the silicon is doped.
8. A material according to claim any one of the preceding claims in which the silicon is in the form of chemical grade silicon powder.
9. A material according to claim 2 in which the graphite is artificial graphite.
10. A material according to claim 10 in which the artificial graphite is ground to a size range of from 0.1 to 100 microns.
11. A material according to any one of the preceding claims in which the conductive particles constitute from 30% to 60% by volume of the material.
12. A material according to any one of the preceding claims in which the conductive particles are present in from 100 to 300 parts, more preferably 150 to 270 parts per 100 parts by weight of elastomeric material.
13. A material according to claim 1 in which the elastomeric material is a silicone rubber.
EP88303516A 1987-04-21 1988-04-19 Pressure responsive electrically conductive materials Withdrawn EP0289193A1 (en)

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GB878709355A GB8709355D0 (en) 1987-04-21 1987-04-21 Electrically conductive materials
GB8709355 1987-04-21

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Cited By (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
WO1998033193A1 (en) * 1997-01-25 1998-07-30 Peratech Ltd Polymer composition
US7186356B2 (en) 2001-06-07 2007-03-06 Peratech Ltd. Analytical device

Citations (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3506607A (en) * 1965-07-09 1970-04-14 Gen Electric Ablative compositions
US3806471A (en) * 1968-04-29 1974-04-23 R Mitchell Pressure responsive resistive material
US4028276A (en) * 1973-10-31 1977-06-07 E. I. Du Pont De Nemours & Company Pressure-sensitive elastic resistor compositions
GB2192186A (en) * 1986-07-01 1988-01-06 Uniroyal Ltd Pressure responsive electrically conductive materials

Patent Citations (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3506607A (en) * 1965-07-09 1970-04-14 Gen Electric Ablative compositions
US3806471A (en) * 1968-04-29 1974-04-23 R Mitchell Pressure responsive resistive material
US4028276A (en) * 1973-10-31 1977-06-07 E. I. Du Pont De Nemours & Company Pressure-sensitive elastic resistor compositions
GB2192186A (en) * 1986-07-01 1988-01-06 Uniroyal Ltd Pressure responsive electrically conductive materials

Cited By (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
WO1998033193A1 (en) * 1997-01-25 1998-07-30 Peratech Ltd Polymer composition
US7186356B2 (en) 2001-06-07 2007-03-06 Peratech Ltd. Analytical device

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