Patents by Inventor Enrique Barrera

Enrique Barrera has filed for patents to protect the following inventions. This listing includes patent applications that are pending as well as patents that have already been granted by the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO).

  • Publication number: 20080048364
    Abstract: The present invention is directed to new methods for combining, processing, and modifying existing materials, resulting in novel products with enhanced mechanical, electrical and electronic properties. The present invention provides for polymer/carbon nanotube composites with increased strength and toughness; beneficial for lighter and/or stronger structural components for terrestrial and aerospace applications, electrically and thermally conductive polymer composites, and electrostatic dissipative materials. Such composites rely on a molecular interpenetration between entangled single-wall carbon nanotubes (SWNTs) and cross-linked polymers to a degree not possible with previous processes.
    Type: Application
    Filed: July 22, 2005
    Publication date: February 28, 2008
    Applicant: WILLIAM MARSH RICE UNIVERSITY
    Inventors: Constantine Armeniades, Enrique Barrera, Jong Kim
  • Publication number: 20070298669
    Abstract: The present invention is directed to methods of functionalizing carbon nanotubes (CNTs), particularly single-wall carbon nanotubes (SWNTs), with organosilane species, wherein such functionalization enables fabrication of advanced polymer composites. The present invention is also directed toward the functionalized CNTs, advanced CNT-polymer composites made with such functionalized CNTs, and methods of making such advanced CNT-polymer composites.
    Type: Application
    Filed: July 28, 2004
    Publication date: December 27, 2007
    Applicant: WILLIAM MARSH RICE UNIVERSITY
    Inventors: Enrique Barrera, Jiang Zhu, Lei Zhang, Valery Khabashesku, Johm Margrave, Mary Lou Margrave, Jong Dae Kim
  • Publication number: 20070228317
    Abstract: The present invention is directed towards a ceramic nanocomposite comprising a nanostructured carbon component inside a ceramic host. The ceramic nanocomposite may further comprise vapor grown carbon fibers. Such nanostructured carbon materials impart both structural and thermal barrier enhancements to the ceramic host. The present invention is also directed towards a method of making these ceramic nanocomposites and for methods of using them in various applications.
    Type: Application
    Filed: December 22, 2005
    Publication date: October 4, 2007
    Applicant: William Marsh Rice University
    Inventors: Enrique Barrera, Leonard Yowell, Brian Mayeaux, Erica Corral, Joseph Cesarano
  • Publication number: 20070099792
    Abstract: In some embodiments, the present invention is directed to methods of fully integrating CNTs and the surrounding polymer matrix in CNT/polymer composites. In some such embodiments, such integration comprises interfacial covalent bonding between the CNTs and the polymer matrix. In some such embodiments, such interfacial covalent bonding is provided by a free radical reaction initiated during processing. In some such embodiments, such free radical initiation can be provided by benzoyl peroxide. In some or other embodiments, the present invention is directed to CNT/polymer composite systems, wherein the CNTs within such systems are covalently integrated with the polymer. In some or other embodiments, the present invention is directed to articles of manufacture made from such CNT/polymer composite systems.
    Type: Application
    Filed: April 26, 2006
    Publication date: May 3, 2007
    Applicant: William Marsh Rice University
    Inventors: Valery Khabashesku, Enrique Barrera, Daneesh McIntosh, Laura Para-Pena
  • Publication number: 20060253942
    Abstract: The present invention is directed toward devices comprising carbon nanotubes that are capable of detecting displacement, impact, stress, and/or strain in materials, methods of making such devices, methods for sensing/detecting/monitoring displacement, impact, stress, and/or strain via carbon nanotubes, and various applications for such methods and devices. The devices and methods of the present invention all rely on mechanically-induced electronic perturbations within the carbon nanotubes to detect and quantify such stress/strain. Such detection and quantification can rely on techniques which include, but are not limited to, electrical conductivity/conductance and/or resistivity/resistance detection/measurements, thermal conductivity detection/measurements, electroluminescence detection/measurements, photoluminescence detection/measurements, and combinations thereof. All such techniques rely on an understanding of how such properties change in response to mechanical stress and/or strain.
    Type: Application
    Filed: January 23, 2004
    Publication date: November 9, 2006
    Applicant: William Marsh Rice University
    Inventors: Enrique Barrera, Satish Nagarajaiah, Prasad Dharap, Li Zhiling, Jong Kim
  • Publication number: 20060202168
    Abstract: The present invention involves the interaction of radiation with functionalized carbon nanotubes that have been incorporated into various host materials, particularly polymeric ones. The present invention is directed to chemistries, methods, and apparatuses which exploit this type of radiation interaction, and to the materials which result from such interactions. The present invention is also directed toward the time dependent behavior of functionalized carbon nanotubes in such composite systems.
    Type: Application
    Filed: November 25, 2003
    Publication date: September 14, 2006
    Applicant: William Marsh Rice University
    Inventors: Enrique Barrera, Richard Wilkins, Meisha Shofner, Merlyn Pulikkathara, Ranji Vaidyanathan
  • Publication number: 20060166003
    Abstract: The present invention is directed to methods of integrating carbon nanotubes into epoxy polymer composites via chemical functionalization of carbon nanotubes, and to the carbon nanotube-epoxy polymer composites produced by such methods. Integration is enhanced through improved dispersion and/or covalent bonding with the epoxy matrix during the curing process. In general, such methods involve the attachment of chemical moieties (i.e., functional groups) to the sidewall and/or end-cap of carbon nanotubes such that the chemical moieties react with either the epoxy precursor(s) or the curing agent(s) (or both) during the curing process. Additionally, in some embodiments, these or additional chemical moieties can function to facilitate dispersion of the carbon nanotubes by decreasing the van der Waals attractive forces between the nanotubes.
    Type: Application
    Filed: June 16, 2004
    Publication date: July 27, 2006
    Applicant: William Marsh Rice University
    Inventors: Valery Khabashesku, Jiang Zhu, Haiqing Peng, Enrique Barrera, Mary Margrave
  • Publication number: 20060122284
    Abstract: The present invention is generally directed to methods of in situ dispersion of nanosized materials (nanomaterials) in polymer hosts during the interfacial synthesis of said polymers. Such methods can generally comprise the steps of: (a) suspending a quantity of nanomaterials in a non-polar solvent (e.g., organic) to form a non-polar suspension; (b) dissolving a quantity of a first monomer species in the non-polar suspension to form a non-polar reactant phase; (c) dissolving a quantity of a second monomer species in a polar (e.g., aqueous) solvent to form a polar reactant phase; and (d) contacting the polar reactant phase with the non-polar reactant phase so as to effect interfacial polymerization, wherein such interfacial polymerization yields a composite product comprising nanomaterials well-dispersed in a polymer or copolymer matrix. Alternatively, the nanomaterials can be suspended in the polar solvent.
    Type: Application
    Filed: December 2, 2005
    Publication date: June 8, 2006
    Applicant: William Marsh Rice University
    Inventors: Fernando Rodriguez-Macias, Enrique Barrera
  • Publication number: 20060047052
    Abstract: A method of forming a composite of embedded nanofibers in a polymer matrix is disclosed. The method includes incorporating nanofibers in a plastic matrix forming agglomerates, and uniformly distributing the nanofibers by exposing the agglomerates to hydrodynamic stresses. The hydrodynamic said stresses force the agglomerates to break apart. In combination or additionally elongational flow is used to achieve small diameters and alignment. A nanofiber reinforced polymer composite system is disclosed. The system includes a plurality of nanofibers that are embedded in polymer matrices in micron size fibers. A method for producing nanotube continuous fibers is disclosed. Nanofibers are fibrils with diameters 100 nm, multiwall nanotubes, single wall nanotubes and their various functionalized and derivatized forms. The method includes mixing a nanofiber in a polymer; and inducing an orientation of the nanofibers that enables the nanofibers to be used to enhance mechanical, thermal and electrical properties.
    Type: Application
    Filed: December 7, 2000
    Publication date: March 2, 2006
    Inventors: Enrique Barrera, Fernando Rodriguez-Macias, Karen Lozano, Luis Chibante, David Stewart