By Martin Schwoerer
September 3, 2008 -
A carbon fiber Formula 1 machine can sprint from 0 - 120mph in less than five seconds and survive crashes at 100. Sadly, the price of the hi-tech material is prohibitively expensive, restricted use to racing cars, luxury bicycles, boats and aviation. Now that those planes are getting long in the teeth, a German joint venture named CFK-Valley Stade reckons it can recycle carbon fiber (CF) from old Airbus frames for automotive applications. The project involves 77 (count ‘em 77) research institutes and a major waste disposal company. Dow Chemical will be joining CFK-Valley Stade to build a plant to recycle more than 1k tons a year, starting (you guessed it) 2010. The exact chemical process is complex/boring, but the CF is shredded and subjected to pyrolysis. The fibers are then isolated and combed. The finished product is sub-aviation quality, but a lot cheaper. For cars, recycled CF may be used for interior parts, gas pumps, body parts or exterior mirrors. A VW spokesperson says at the expected lower price, CF will drift from its present applications in the company’s Bugatti and Lamborghini brands down market, to VW (SEAT?). Is this the antidote to the sad tendency of car companies to think thin, but build fat?
Financial Times (Germany) »3 Comments on “ Recycled Carbon Fiber Tasty, Less Filling ”
Leave a Reply
Back to Top
You must be logged in to post a comment.

Subscribe to New Content Alerts

BlinkList
Digg
del.icio.us
Facebook
Furl
Google
Live
NewsVine
Reddit
StumbleUpon
Technorati
YahooMyWeb
POWERED
September 3rd, 2008 at 12:07 pm
It sounds like a fairly energy-intensive process to recycle this stuff, so the “going price” is pretty much tied to energy prices, eh?
Still, better to reuse the shortened fibers, but I wonder about their strength in larger panels (i.e. hoods).
September 3rd, 2008 at 12:14 pm
“Is this the antidote to the sad tendency of car companies to think thin, but build fat?”
No. The OEMs have not thought thin for the last couple of decades. Their cars have grown progressively longer, wider, and heavier. Their solution to their engineering problems seems to be bolt a turbo charger on to it.
For them, carbon fiber is lipstick on a pig.
September 3rd, 2008 at 6:00 pm
Shaker:
The hood isn’t stressed. It doesn’t matter how strong it is.