Carbon Fibre Report
Carbon Fibre Report
Carbon Fibre Report
Abstract
Steel and other hard construction materials have revolutionized the field of industry. Now, a stage has come that there is a need of a better material to catch up with the growing needs and demands of the modern society. This need has bought up a newer material to the field which is now known as Carbon Fibres. Carbon fibre is one of the latest reinforcement materials used in composites. It's a real hi-tech material, which provides very good structural properties, better than those of any metal. Carbon fibre has a tensile strength almost 3 times greater than that of steel, yet is 4.5 times less dense. Carbon fibers are carbon fibres with values of Youngs modulus between 150 and 275 to 300 GPa.
Introduction
When you go to a sports shop you are inundated with new "graphite" based materials for sports equipment: golf clubs, tennis rackets, bicycles (frames and wheel disks), ultra light airframes feature these new lightweight materials. But, we are also familiar with graphite as being a very common and mundane substance. Graphite has long been a component of pencil lead, and is used as a basic lubricant. How is it that graphite is both a hi-tech and low-tech material? Could we take a bunch of pencil leads and epoxy them together into a cutting edge tennis racquet? Anyone who has used mechanical pencils knows that the leads break far too easily to provide a strong frame. It would seem as if there are two different kinds of graphite. In fact, this is true. When vendors market "graphite fibre" products they are usually selling a "carbon fibre" product. The correct name for the fibres used in all strengthening and reinforcing applications is carbon fibres. But, there is more to the story than just a general misconception over the term "graphite fibres." Surprisingly, if we look at a small section of graphite and carbon fibres on the atomic level they appear to be identical.
Key Benefits
Property Elastic Modulus (GPa) Fine Grained Graphite 10-15 Unidirectional Fibres 120-150 600-700 500-800 1.4-2.0 poor 3-D Fibres 40-100 200-350 150-200 5-10 better than graphite
Tensile Strength (MPa) 40-60 Compressive Strength 110-200 (MPa) Fracture Energy (kJm-2) Oxidation resistance 0.07-0.09 Very low
Carbon fibre has a tensile strength almost 3 times greater than that of steel, yet is 4.5 times less dense. Some other properties of carbon fibre are: high tensile strength low thermal expansion Resistance to corrosion and fire High stress tolerance levels electrically and thermally conductive Chemical inertness light weight and low density very hard and brittle high abrasion and wear resistance
improved through further heating steps up to 3000C, a process called graphitization. Because the graphite ribbons are bonded to each other perpendicular to the fibres only by weak Van der Waals bonds, the ribbons must be reoriented to increase the tensile strength of the fibre to a useful level. This is accomplished through the application of tension at some point in the stabilization or pyrolysis phases, the exact time depending on the precursor material. Increased axial orientation increases the fibre's tensile strength by making better use of the strong covalent bonds along the ribbons of graphite plates. Polyacrylonitrile (PAN) and rayon are the most commonly used precursors. PAN is stretched during the stabilization phase, and heated to 250C in air. The tension is then removed, and the fibre is heated slowly in an inert nitrogen atmosphere to 1000-1500C. Slow heating maintains the molecular ordering applied by tension during the stabilization phase. Graphitization at temperatures up to 3000C then follows. Applying tension at 2000C further increases the proper ordering of graphite ribbons. Rayon, a cellulose-based fibre made from wood pulp, is spun into a filament from a melt, and stabilized without tension up to 400C. It is then carbonized without tension up to 1500C, and is stretched in the graphitization phase up to 2500C
Advantages
Very low weight High impact tolerance Insensitive to climate and temperature changes Reduced maintenance costs Long service life
10
Shortcomings
The chief drawback of carbon fibre composites is that they oxidize readily at temperatures between 600-700C, especially in the presence of atomic oxygen. A protective coating (usually silicon carbide) must be applied to prevent high-temperature oxidation, adding an additional manufacturing step and additional cost to the production process. The high electrical conductivity of airborne graphite particles creates an unhealthy environment for electrical equipment near machining areas. Carbon fibre composites are currently very expensive and complicated to produce, which limits their use mostly to aerospace and defense applications.
11
Applications
Carbon fibres are cutting edges in: Aerospace and aircraft industry Sports equipment Automotive parts Small consumer goods like laptops, watches etc. Air filtration Fishing rods and tripods Acoustics As a microelectrode in extracellular recording in medicine
12
Conclusion
Carbon Fibre is now an engineering material that must be designed, engineered and manufactured to the same standards of precision and quality control as any other engineering material. Carbon fibre thus has revolutionized the field of light weight materials. This can be used as a substitute for steel without the most of latters difficulties like high weight, lack of corrosion resistance etc. This is thus one of the future manufacturing materials.
13
Bibliography
14