| Literature DB >> 35888458 |
Amiruddin Isa1, Norlin Nosbi1, Mokhtar Che Ismail1, Hazizan Md Akil2, Wan Fahmin Faiz Wan Ali3, Mohd Firdaus Omar4.
Abstract
Carbon fibres are widely used in modern industrial applications as they are high-strength, light in weight and more reliable than other materials. The increase in the usage of carbon fibres has led to the production of a significant amount of waste. This has become a global issue because valuable carbon fibre waste ends up in landfill. A few initiatives have been undertaken by several researchers to recycle carbon fibre waste; however, the properties of this recycled material are expected to be worse than those of virgin carbon fibre. The incorporation of polymers, nanoparticles and other hybrid materials could enhance the overall properties of recycled carbon fibre waste. However, the degradation of fibre composites is expected to occur when the material is exposed to certain conditions and environments. The study of fibre composite degradation is crucial to enhance their properties, strength, safety and durability for future applications.Entities:
Keywords: carbon fibre; environmental degradation; fibres; recycling
Year: 2022 PMID: 35888458 PMCID: PMC9324376 DOI: 10.3390/ma15144991
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Materials (Basel) ISSN: 1996-1944 Impact factor: 3.748
Figure 1Increase in carbon fibre global demand.
Figure 2Methods of recycling carbon fibre waste [25].
Figure 3Example of recycled carbon fibre composite samples by mechanical process (pictures were originally taken at the Centre of Corrosion Research, Universiti Teknologi Pertronas).
Figure 4SEM images of recycled carbon fibre waste with ×500 and ×2000 magnification (pictures were originally taken at the Centre of Corrosion Research, Universiti Teknologi Pertronas).
Recent research on the extraction and recycling of carbon fibres.
| Year | Type of Material and Product | Recycling Ways | Parameters | Result | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2014 | Carbon fibre-reinforced plastic (CFRP) → carbon fibre + thermoplastic resin | Chemically (selective decomposition) | Supercritical methanol at 270 °C at 8 MPa | Carbon fibre tensile strength reduced by 9% | [ |
| Carbon fibre interfacial strength reduced by 20% | |||||
| 2020 | Carbon fibre-reinforced polymer composites (CFRP) waste → carbon fibre | Thermally (two-step thermolysis) | 30 min of pyrolysis at 500 °C and 40 min of oxidation | 93.47% carbon fibre recovered | [ |
| 2020 | Recycled carbon fibres → recycled carbon fibre-reinforced polyamide 6 (nylon 6) and polypropylene | Mechanically and thermally (using simulation of injection moulding on Moldflow) | Injection pressure: | Tensile strength increased 427% for nylon 6 | [ |
| Tensile strength increased 781% for polypropylene | |||||
| 2021 | Recycled carbon fibres → recycled carbon fibre-reinforced polypropylene | Mechanically and thermally (using injection moulding) | Fibre weight percentage: | Stiffness and strength increased linearly with weight percentage of fibre | [ |
| 18.5% improvement in tensile strength (30 wt%) | |||||
| 2021 | Unsaturated polyester resins (UPRs) → carbon fibre | Chemically (via hydrolysis-oxidation synergistic catalytic strategy) | 80% N2H was added into NaOH | Recycled carbon fibre tensile strength was 3.05 GPa | [ |
| Virgin carbon fibre tensile strength was 3.33 GPa | |||||
| 2021 | Recycled carded nonwoven carbon fibre → recycled discontinuous carbon fibre organosheet | Thermally (compression moulding) | Heated press at 300 °C under 1 MPa pressure for 5 min | Recycled fibre type samples recorded 94 MPa for tensile strength compared to the virgin version at 139 MPa. | [ |
Recent research on the degradation of fibre-reinforced composites.
| Year | Type of Material | Type of Degradation | Parameters | Result | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2010 | Phosphate glass fibre-reinforced methacrylate-modified oligolactide | Salt solution | 0.9 wt% NaCl solution at 37 °C | pH dropped from 7.26 to 7.11 | [ |
| 2013 | Natural fibre-reinforced polymer matrix composites (using sawdust and wheat flour for fibre and polypropylene for matrix) | Moist soil | Material exposed to degradation solution for 15 weeks | Tensile strength decreased from 32.1 MPa to: | [ |
| 2016 | Carbon fibre-reinforced polymer strip anode | NaOH solution | Applied current ampere: | Degradation rates at 4 mA were: | [ |
| 2017 | Glass fibre-reinforced polymer using isophthalic polyester resin | Seawater | Immersed in artificial seawater and deionised water for 6 months | Glass transition temperature decreased by 2.5% | [ |
| 2018 | Nylon 6-based carbon fibre-reinforced thermoplastics (CFRTP) using epoxy resin, polyamide and polycarbonate | Hot steam (at various temperatures) | Temperature and pressure: | Molecular weight decreased | [ |
| 2019 | Toray T700 6 k carbon fibre fabric | Acetone | Temperature of 300 °C for 1 h | Resin removal yield (RRY): | [ |
| 2019 | Basalt fibre-reinforced epoxy composites | Saltwater | Mass of salt in 1 L of water at 25 °C: | Negligible reduction in static strength | [ |
| 2020 | E-glass fibre with epoxy resin, E-glass fibre with polyester resin, E-glass fibre with vinyl ester resin and glass fibre with polypropylene | Temperature | Temperature dependence of Weibull stress modulus and fibre strength at a certain gauge length was negligible | Tensile strength decreased with an increase in temperature | [ |
| 2020 | Water | Immersion conducted for 72 h | Absorption rate increased with an increase in fibre content | [ | |
| 2020 | Carbon fibre reinforced polycarbonate | Hot water | Deionised water at 80 °C | Tensile properties decreased rapidly with time after 7 days | [ |
| 2021 | Virgin and pyrolysed carbon fibre | Thermal (using thermogravimetric analysis | Heating rate at 5 and 10 K/min | Pyrolysed carbon fibre degraded at lower temperatures compared to virgin carbon fibre | [ |
Figure 5The effect of ageing on bio-based fibre composites.
Figure 6Breakdown of polymer matrix due to elevation in fluid temperature.
Figure 7An illustration of the quantum dots analysis technique for the study of fibre-reinforced polymer composite degradation in seawater.
Figure 8Aggressive ions attack microcracks in the fibre.