Carbon Copy: New Method of Recycling Carbon Fiber Shows Potential - Technology Org | By The Digital Insider
Ultra-light cars made from recycled carbon fiber are a step closer, thanks to a new method of recycling developed at UNSW Canberra.
As manufacturing and technology continually take steps forward, products are using more advanced materials and becoming more sophisticated but also more complicated.
This presents a problem when these products end their useable life because they’re either difficult or expensive to recycle.
For example, as the world transitions to electric vehicles, disposing of their used batteries, some made with highly toxic materials, will be challenging.
Many advanced products either end up in landfills or incinerated, which is a waste of valuable resources and harmful to the planet.
One material that has been difficult to recycle is carbon fiber.
However, a UNSW Canberra researcher has developed a method to recycle it in a way that not only wastes less of the material, but also uses less energy and leaves more of it intact and able to be turned into more useful new products.
Carbon fibres are thin strands of carbon that are exceptionally strong and lightweight. The fibres are combined with plastic to create a composite that can be used to construct a variety of products.
Carbon fibre is commonly used to build aircraft, wind turbines, and it is the primary material used in Formula 1 race cars, which need to be as light as possible to increase performance. You might encounter carbon fibre in high-end bicycles or other sporting equipment such as hockey sticks or tennis racquets.
UNSW Canberra researcher Di He said that, until now, recycling carbon fibre had always resulted in the material being heavily degraded.
“This project was a collaboration with our partner in the automotive industry, who wants to investigate building cars out of recycled carbon fibre,” Dr He said.
“But with the previous methods of recycling carbon fibre, the material was heavily compromised.
“The mechanical performance of objects made from the existing recycled fibres is degraded by 80 to 90 per cent, compared to using new fibres.
“Typically, it is only reused to make low-value products like tables or chairs, products that don’t experience heavy forces or loads.
“The existing method of recycling involves shredding the composite, which destroys the carbon fibre, before heating it to remove the plastic. After it has been shredded, the fibres look like individual hairs or cotton wool strands,” he explained.
“In our method, we don’t shred the carbon fibre and we optimised how we heat it in a furnace.
“This leaves the fibres intact, and therefore the new product made from the recycled carbon fibre is much stronger.
“Our method degrades the carbon fibre by less than 30 per cent, which is a 50 per cent improvement on existing methods.”
While the recycled carbon fibre produced using Dr He’s method is not yet suitable for constructing a car, it is significantly closer to that goal than before. The new and improved recycled carbon fibre can potentially be used to construct individual parts of a car, such as a roof.
Car manufacturers are interested in carbon fibre vehicles as the lower weight can make the cars more energy efficient, helping them meet the new fuel efficiency standard announced by the Australian government earlier this year. As we transition to electric vehicles, this would also help reduce vehicle electricity consumption, thereby increasing vehicle range.
Carbon fibre is expensive to make, which explains the appeal of recycled carbon fibre, in addition to its environmental benefits. Recycling carbon fibre requires one-tenth of the energy needed to produce it from scratch.
One of the lead researchers from the UNSW Canberra Advanced Manufacturing Research Group, Associate Professor Matthew Doolan, said that as the world progressed with engineering and technological advancements, it needed to think more about reducing waste.
“As we make more advanced products we also make them from significantly more advanced materials, and as a result, we are creating problems at the end of the life of that product,” A/Prof. Doolan said.
“The standard practice of just dumping these products, or burning them, is unsustainable and cannot continue forever.
“Exploring other options available to us is one of the key questions we’re hoping to help answer at UNSW Canberra.”
Source: UNSW
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