Publications

Single carbon fibres: Structure from X-ray Diffraction and Nanomechanical Properties

Author(s)
Herwig Peterlik, Oskar Paris
Abstract

High performance carbon fibres are mainly used as reinforcement in fibre-reinforced structural components in aerospace-, automotive-, sports-, and energy applications. For example, many of the lightweight and stiff structural parts of bicycles, sport cars or wind turbine blades are nowadays made of carbon fibre reinforced plastics (CFRP), and the demand for such materials is continuously increasing. The dominant part (more than 90%) of carbon fibres are produced from polyacrylonitrile (PAN) precursor fibres with intermediate moduli of a few 100 GPa, but very high tensile strength up to 8 GPa. The second important class are fibres produced from mesophase pitches (MPP), leading to fibres with extremely high moduli (almost 1000 GPa) as well as good thermal and electrical conductivity. Together with their low weight, chemical resistance, biocompatibility, temperature tolerance and low thermal expansion, carbon fibres may only be beaten by other carbons such as carbon nanotubes (chapter 3) or graphene (chapter 4) as reinforcing materials. Although being much cheaper than those “modern” carbon nanomaterials, still carbon fibres are relatively expensive as compared to, e.g., glass fibres. Nonetheless, the world-wide carbon fibre production is steadily increasing and is expected to double from 68.000 tons in 2015 to 130.000 tons in 2020 (Holmes 2013). This demonstrates that carbon fibres are - and will further remain - the absolutely dominating carbon nanomaterials for light weight structural parts.

Organisation(s)
Dynamics of Condensed Systems
External organisation(s)
Max-Planck-Institut für Kolloid- und Grenzflächenforschung, Montanuniversität Leoben
Pages
1-28
No. of pages
28
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-7091-1887-0_1
Publication date
2016
Peer reviewed
Yes
Austrian Fields of Science 2012
103015 Condensed matter, 103018 Materials physics, 103008 Experimental physics, 103009 Solid state physics
Keywords
ASJC Scopus subject areas
Mechanics of Materials, Mechanical Engineering, Computer Science Applications, Modelling and Simulation
Portal url
https://ucrisportal.univie.ac.at/en/publications/e082f006-c8df-45e8-b413-d2fc64b10d51