Abstract

Composite materials are promising materials, which should exhibit an improve on several aspects of the physical properties such as mechanical, thermal, electrical etc.. A composite material is a system of materials composed of two or more components randomly mixed and bonded on a macroscopic scale. For example, metal-alloys Silicon carbides such as Aluminum Silicon Carbide (AlSiC) is made up of Aluminum, Silicon and Carbone on a microscopic scale. It is a metal matrix composite (MMC) packages that have a unique set of material properties. It is ideally suited to thermal management performance, and a functionality that supports high-density interconnection microelectronic packaging applications (Hollecka et al., 1988) & (Zhang et al., 2004). This example is one of the concrete evidences that thermal conduction is an important feature of composites' application for electronic packaging, which are associated with thermal insulation, and heat spreader. General speaking, we should have different composite materials which are suitable for different applications (Xu, & Yagi, 2004), and this can be achieved because of the unique character of the detailed microstructure of the composites. In particular, a composite material is composed of strengthening items (reinforcement) such as particles, flakes, fibers, etc.., embedded in a matrix of metals, ceramics, or polymers. The matrix holds these items to form the desired shape while the items improve the overall physical properties of the matrix. When designed properly, the new combined material exhibits better physical property than would each individual material. When composites are selected over traditional materials such as metal alloys or plastics, it is usually because of one or more desired properties regarding cost, weight, size, surface condition, strength, thermal and electrical conduction etc... For example, SliconCarbide SiC/SiC composites, which are relatively cheap, have upper limit for thermal conductivity that exceeds the corresponds obtained in single crystal and high-purity chemically vapor deposited CVD SiC. Effective thermal conductivity (λeff) of such composites reaches maximum values of ~320 W/m oC at room temperature (Zinkle & Snead, 1999). This value is comparable if not higher than the thermal conductivity of some precious expensive metals such gold and silver. A new generation of functionally graded fibrous composites called functionally graded materials (FGMs) (Suresh, 1998), (Koizumi, 1993) and (Fung & Hu, 2008). FGMs have dynamic effective thermal properties and the volume fraction of the materials changes

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