recycle carbon fiber
Published

DITF oriented rCF tapes target virgin fiber CFRP substitution

Infinity project developed highly oriented rCF/PA6 tapes with 88% the tensile strength, modulus of a virgin CFRP product and 49-66% reduction in global warming potential.

Share

Resulting “Infinity” rCF tape variant without trimming of the tape edges. Source |DITF

The German Institutes of Textile and Fiber Research Denkendorf (DITF) has announced the development of highly oriented tapes made from recycled carbon fibers (rCF) suitable for reuse in high-performance applications such as structural automotive components.

Carbon fibers are usually produced from petroleum-based raw materials in an energy-intensive process that emits large amounts of CO2. The material has a global warming potential of around 20-65 kilograms of CO2 equivalents per kilogram. Nevertheless, the production of carbon fiber-reinforced polymers (CFRP) continues to increase and with it the amount of CFRP waste. According to the DITF, this is because, depending on the processing method, up to 50% offcuts are generated during production. In addition, there are large quantities of CFRP waste in the form of end-of-life (EOL) components, and currently only 15% of CFRP waste is recycled. The remaining 85% end up in waste incineration plants or landfills. 

Compared to virgin fibers, potential use of rCF is limited. Carbon fiber in its virgin form is usually present in filament strands of technically unlimited length and oriented in the direction of the load. Recycling inevitably shortens this carbon fiber to lengths in the micrometer to centimeter range. In addition, the orientation of the carbon fibers is lost and the fibers are initially in a tangled position.

For 15 years the DITF have been adapting traditional spinning processes to rCF in an effort to develop a new category of rCF semi-finished products and improve their mechanical properties so that they can actually replace virgin fiber material in structural applications. Only then will carbon fiber-based composite materials be truly recyclable, the DITF says.

In order to produce an oriented, semi-finished product similar to a product using virgin fibers, it is crucial to eliminate the rCF’s entanglement and align the fibers parallel to each other. One promising way of achieving this is the production of highly oriented tapes.

First, rCF are opened and mixed with thermoplastic matrix fibers (polyamide 6). The fiber mixture is then further separated and oriented in a carding process modified for the processing of carbon fibers. At the outlet of the carding machine, the fiber card web produced in the carding process is combined into a fiber sliver and deposited in a can. This rCF/PA6 fiber sliver is the starting material for the subsequent tape forming process, already offering a pre-orientation of the carbon fibers. The orientation of the fibers can be increased in the subsequent drawing process. By drawing the fiber tape, the fibers are moved in the direction of draft and aligned longitudinally. The final process step is tape formation, in which the fiber tape, under tension, is formed into the desired shape and fixed into a continuous tape structure. During fixation, thermoplastic fibers melt partially or completely and then solidify.

This technology developed at the DITF for the production of highly oriented rCF tapes was used as part of the “Infinity” research project (03LB3006) to demonstrate a sustainable and fiber-friendly recycling cycle for CFRP. Based on the “Infinity” tapes, a composite material was developed that achieved 88% of the tensile strength and tensile modulus of a comparable virgin fiber product. In addition, a life cycle analysis showed that the global warming potential is reduced by approximately 49% when using pyrolysis fibers and by approximately 66% for rCF from production waste.

Wabash
Toray Advanced Composites hi-temperature materials
ELFOAM rigid foam products
Adhesives for Composite Materials
Alpha’s Premier ESR®
CompositesWorld
ColorForm multi-component injection
Eliminate Quality Escapes  With LASERVISION AI
NewStar Adhesives - Nautical Adhesives
HEATCON Composite Systems
Airtech
recycle carbon fiber

Related Content

Aerospace

Plant tour: Sekisui Aerospace, Orange City, Iowa, Renton and Sumner, Wash., U.S.

Veteran composites sites use kaizen and innovation culture to expand thermoplastic serial production, 4.0 digitization and new technology for diversified new markets.

Read More
Thermoplastics

Welding is not bonding

Discussion of the issues in our understanding of thermoplastic composite welded structures and certification of the latest materials and welding technologies for future airframes.

Read More
Thermoplastics

Optimizing a thermoplastic composite helicopter door hinge

9T Labs used Additive Fusion Technology to iterate CFRTP designs, fully exploit continuous fiber printing and outperform stainless steel and black metal designs in failure load and weight.

Read More
Automotive

Thermoplastic composites: Cracking the horizontal body panel nut

Versatile sandwich panel technology solves decades-long exterior automotive challenge.

Read More

Read Next

Feature

Biomaterials make strides toward composites sustainability

A compilation of trends in development or application of natural fibers, bio-based resins and more showcases industry players, educational institutes and global projects.

Read More
Natural Fibers

DITF, RBX Créations develops hemp-based pulp for filament-spun cellulose fibers

Partners present a complete process chain for the development of hemp-based fibers, yarns and fabrics using energy- and resource-saving processes.

Read More
Sustainability

Novel DITF composite material enables CO2-negative construction

Three materials — bio-based carbon fibers, natural stone and biochar — act as an alternative to reinforced concrete in a house wall demonstrator in the DACCUS-Pre project.  

Read More
Airtech International Inc.