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| United States Patent | 4613351 |
| Link to this page | http://www.wikipatents.com/4613351.html |
| Inventor(s) | Spohr; Reimar (Darmstadt, DE) |
| Abstract | The invention comprises a solid material that is an electrical conductor in
a single direction which comprises an amorphous glass matrix containing a
plurality of microscopically thin metal filaments, all of which are
oriented in the direction of conductivity and extend to or near the
surfaces of the solid material. This directionally conducting material is
produced by subjecting a metastable glass supersaturated with metal to
directed ionic radiation. On irradiation parallel microscopic holes or
pores are formed which become filled with molten metal during tempering,
which cool to form metallic dipole filaments. The thickness of the
material and the angle of irradiation may be selected to produce dipole
filaments of lengths appropriate to act as antennas for electromagnetic
radiation of wavelengths from about 0.1 micron to about 1 mm. The
direction of conductivity, i.e., the direction of the metal filaments, may
be at any predetermined angle to the surface of the solid material
controlled by the direction of irradiation. |
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Title Information  |
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Drawing from US Patent 4613351 |
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Solid material having special electrical properties and a method for its
preparation |
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| Publication Date |
September 23, 1986 |
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| Filing Date |
June 26, 1985 |
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| Parent Case |
This is a division of application Ser. No. 660,203, filed Oct. 12, 1984. |
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| Priority Data |
Oct 12, 1983[DE]3337049 |
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Title Information  |
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Claims  |
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What is claimed is:
1. Method for producing a solid material that is electrically conductive in
one direction and electrically insulating in any direction perpedicular to
the one direction, comprising:
(a) producing a layer of metastable glass supersaturated with a metal,
(b) irradiating the layer at an angle to its surface with heavy ions of a
predetermined energy, type of ion and area dosage, and
(c) tempering the irradiated layer or maturing the formed metal nuclei
until the separated (discrete) metal aggregrates merge to form metallic
filaments.
2. The method of claim 1, wherein the layer of metastable glass
supersaturated with a metal is produced by a method selected from the
group consisting of conventional glass making, ion sputtering,
precipitation from a gas phase, and simultaneous vapor deposition.
3. The method of claim 1, wherein the layer of metastable glass is prepared
from copper, silver or gold and silicon dioxide.
4. The method of claim 1, wherein the layer of metastable glass is
irradiated with uranium, lead or xenon ions.
5. The method of claim 4, wherein the radiation density is 10.sup.11
/cm.sup.2.
6. The method of claim 1, wherein the metallic filaments are formed by
tempering at temperatures of from room temperature to 400.degree. C. |
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Claims  |
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Description  |
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BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
The present invention relates to a solid material or to a body of solid
material of preferably a planar or flat geometry having unique electrical
properties relating to directional conductivity and high frequency
electromagnetic radiation resonance. The present invention generally
relates to the effect of heavy ion radiation on solids and to the nuclear
traces, or microholes, formed in the homogeneous structure of a solid
insulating material along the paths of high energy ions by such radiation
treatment which can be used to initiate a phase conversion process.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
It is now the object of the present invention to provide a novel solid
material with unique electrical properties. In particular, the material of
this invention is electrically conductive in one direction but acts as an
insulator in directions not parallel thereto. Also included in the
invention is a method for making the novel solid material. With this solid
material, or with a solid body of a finite thickness produced therefrom,
it is possible, inter alia, to positively generate deflect, and detect
electromagnetic radiation of wavelengths between less than 0.1 micron and
about 1 mm, which previously could only be performed with difficulty.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
The FIGURE is a schematic side view of a portion of a flat solid body
according to the invention wherein radiation formed pores and one metal
dipole formed therein are shown.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
The present invention now proposes to accomplish the detection deflection,
and generation of electromagnetic radiation by offering a solid material
or body of solid material having non-isotropic electrical properties which
is characterized by being electrically conductive in one direction while
being electrically insulating in the direction perpendicular thereto.
The solid material according to the invention is preferably formed into a
solid body of finite thickness of a planar or flat geometry which
comprises a matrix of dielectric material containing a plurality of
dipoles of electrically conductive material disposed within the matrix
such that they are parallel and the ends of the dipoles extend to, or at
least near to, the upper and lower surfaces of the solid body. The
diameter of the electrically conductive dipoles is in the microscopic
range "finite thickness": .ltorsim.0.1.mu. m up to .gtorsim.1 nm.
The solid material according to the invention is preferably comprised of a
metastable glass which is super-saturated with at least one metal or metal
alloy.
A preferred embodiment of a solid material according to the invention is a
glass matrix which contains 1 to 40% of a noble metal such as copper,
silver or gold. The glass matrix may be made from normal glass or quartz
glass.
Normal glass: soda line glass as e.g. 70% SiO.sub.2 +15% CaO+15% No.sub.2 O
by weight.
Quartz glass: 100% SiO.sub.2
The novel solid material according to the invention is produced by first
preparing a slab of insulating material such as glass that is
supersaturated with metal by conventional methods, or for example, by ion
sputtering, by precipitation from the gas phase or by simultaneous vapor
deposition of a layer of a metal and glass such as copper, silver or gold
and silicon dioxide. The slab is irradiated with heavy ions of a
predetermined energy at an angle to its surface, for example,
perpendicular to its surface or at gracing incidence, to produce nuclear
tracks. The slab may be irradiated with a heavy ion dosage, for example,
10.sup.11 /cm.sup.2, using for example uranium, lead or xenon. One method
for producing the microholes by irradiation is disclosed in U.S. Pat. Nos.
3,303,085 or 4,335,164, which is included by reference. The metallic
filaments may form spontaneously or the slab is tempered until the metal
aggregates to form metallic filaments, for example, in a temperature range
of from room temperature to 400.degree. C.
It is envisioned also that the material may be layered or supported on a
substrate of some kind. In the way very thin films may be generated having
the claimed anisotropic properties.
The novel solid material has the advantage, in addition to its special
characteristics with respect to conductivity, of containing a plurality of
oriented metallic dipoles in microscale which have the characteristics of
antennas with respect to the aforementioned electromagnetic radiation. The
spacing of the dipoles can be very large relative to the thickness of the
atomic dipoles. In insulators, the precipitation of metal aggregates along
the parallel pores formed by nuclear radiation produces a plurality of
parallel oriented dipole antennas in the form of fine, electrically
conductive metal needles. Along the anisotropic axes defined by the
nuclear traces, such a composite material has an extraordinarly high
dielectric constant, comparable to the dielectric constant of metals.
However, transverse to the anisotropic axis, i.e., at an angle not in line
with the parallel dipoles, the dielectric constant is practically
unchanged from that of the original insulating material. The
electromagnetic absorption and emission characteristics of such a well
oriented antenna ensemble are novel and serve advantageous purposes.
The list of uses for the material of the invention are as "an antenna
ensemble": generator, deflector, absorbers, reflector and detector for
electromagnetic radiation.
Details of the novel solid material and solid body, respectively, will be
explained in greater detail with the aid of the FIGURE.
The sole FIGURE is a sectional view of a flat solid body of a planar layer
arrangement whose basic material 1 is, for example, a copper, silver or
gold supersaturated quartz glass. It is important in this connection, that
a metastable system exists which tends to demix. However, the material
must be a metastable system e.g. a glass, because during stabilization a
demixing process would have taken place which would have destroyed the
desired characteristics. A certain region 2 of the solid body has been
irradiated with high energy heavy ions, for example 10.sup.10 ions per
cm.sup.2 of uranium, lead or xenon. In the illustrated embodiment the
irradiation took place at an angle of 45.degree. with respect to the
surface, thus producing the latent nuclear traces 3. After irradiation,
the solid body either spontaneously forms contingent metallic needles or
it is subjected to a tempering process until the nuclear traces 3 and the
metal aggregations resulting from the irradiation and following the
direction of the nuclear traces have merged to form metallic filaments.
This occurs in a temperature range from room temperature to about
400.degree. C.
The resulting material has special characteristics; a plurality of dipoles
4 have been produced in the direction of nuclear traces 3 (one is shown by
a thicker line). These dipoles have a high degree of electrical
polarization resulting, in the one direction 5, in very high, practically
metallic conductivity with high polarizability and, in the other direction
6 perpendicular thereto, in negligible conductivity or a high insulating
effect. Thus, electron mobility in directions 5 and 6 differs considerably
from one another. Direction 5, the dipole direction, may be perpendicular
or at any angle to surface 7 of the solid material, i.e. the direction of
irradiation can be selected at will.
A novel anisotropic insulator material is thus produced which has a very
high, practically metallic, dielectric constant in one preferred
direction. The type of metal precipitated, the preferred direction of
conductivity, and the length of the metallic dipole antennas are
selectable. It is also possible embedded metal antennas with this
invention.
The basic principle of the present novel solid material is that, in a
dielectric matrix, noble metals, dissolved out at high temperatures,
exhibit strong tendencies to merge in the form of metallic aggregates.
This aggregation process is actuated by the passage of one or a plurality
of highly ionized ions. It ends in an arrangement of metallic aggregations
along the ion track.
In the above-described manner, the present invention produces metallic
needles, e.g. oriented microscopic dipole antennas of identical length, in
the solid body. Along a preferred axis of anisotropy, such a composite
material has an extraordinarily high dielectric constant at low
frequencies. However, at 90.degree. to the dipole axis, the constant, as
already described, remains very low. At high frequencies, the resonant
absorption or the emission of electromagnetic radiation through such a
well-oriented system of dipole antennas points up further novel and
important characteristics of the material.
"high dielectric constant" means "a dielectric constant approaching that of
a metal".
"low dielectric constant" means "a dielectric constant approaching that of
the glassy matrix".
"high frequencies" means "frequencies approaching frequencies of infrared
or visible light".
"low frequencies" means "frequencies below for example radio frequencies".
The embodiments described above are presented for purposes of illustrating
the invention only. It is conceived that many equivalences, variations,
adaptations and modifications may be made without departing from the
invention which is defined by the scope of the claims set forth below.
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