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Global demand for carbon fibres in cars set to reach 8.5 million
tons by 2015
Global demand for carbon fibres in the production of cars and
other light vehicles is set to reach 8.5 million tons by 2015,
according to a new report by Textiles Intelligence. This
prediction is based on the assumption that each new car will
have just 100 kg of carbon fibres on average, but the actual
potential market could be much greater as fibre prices come down
with rising volumes.
Carbon fibre is a material consisting of extremely thin
fibres with a diameter of around 0.005 0.010 mm. It is used as
the reinforcing material in carbon fibre reinforced plastic (CFRP),
which forms the basis of carbon fibre parts currently used in
aircraft, sports equipment and racing cars.
Its high strength to weight ratio makes it ideal in
aircraft, where the imperative in an era of heightened
eco-awareness is to reduce weight and hence fuel consumption. In
sports equipment and racing cars the emphasis is on performance.
In aircraft, the use of carbon fibre has grown rapidly in recent
years as the basis for composite parts. Twenty years ago it
accounted for only 10% of an aircraft body. But in the latest
superplanes notably the Airbus A380 and the Boeing 787
Dreamliner it has a share of over 50%.
Carbon fibre is also being used more than ever before by the
aircraft used by the US military as well as in many other items
of military equipment.
The next major phase of development for carbon fibre
composites will be in vehicles and electric ones in particular
as the need to reduce pollution and find an eco-friendly
alternative to fossil fuels becomes ever more pressing. Carbon
fibre is ideal because of its high strength to weight ratio and
the need to reduce the weight of the car in order to increase
the distance which the vehicle can be driven before its
batteries need to be recharged.
To take advantage of the market potential, several companies
have formed joint ventures and more are expected to follow. In
one development, plans have been announced by a joint venture
between SGL Group and the automotive manufacturer BMW to invest
US$100 million in the construction of a new carbon fibre
manufacturing plant at Moses Lake, Washington, USA.
Initially, fibres manufactured at the facility will be used
exclusively for BMW’s Megacity - a new electric vehicle which
will be assembled in Leipzig, Germany, and launched before 2015
under a BMW sub brand.
In its use of CFRP components, BMW is furthering a concept
which it calls “sustainable mobility” by using a lightweight
construction it will dramatically reduce fuel consumption and
minimize CO2 emissions.
In a parallel development, the German company Daimler and the
Japanese company Toray Industries announced in April 2010 that
they planned to start joint development of carbon fibre car
parts in 2012 for use in Mercedes Benz cars.
The parts will be made from carbon fibre composite materials
manufactured at Toray’s plant in France. The new materials will
be used in the Mercedes Benz SL Class, making this vehicle the
first mass produced passenger car to include carbon fibre made
by Toray.
Zoltek a leading carbon fibre manufacturer based in the
USA formed a new subsidiary called Zoltek Automotive to speed up
the development of high volume applications for lightweight
carbon fibres within the automotive industry.
Zoltek’s chairman and chief executive officer (CEO), Zsolt
Rumy, said that the company had long identified the automotive
industry as the biggest single potential user of the company’s
low cost, high performance carbon fibres.
According to Zoltek Automotive’s CEO, David Stewart, “the
value proposition and regulatory environment for carbon fibre
automotive components have never been better. There is a large
and rapidly growing range of applications where these materials
are ready to come out of the laboratory and [go] into high
volume production.
Executives at the Japanese company Teijin, another company to
enter the market, believe that the use of carbon fibre
reinforced plastic (CFRP) will cut the weight of electric
vehicles by more than half within a few years.
In March 2010 the company unveiled a super lightweight
electric concept car made with proprietary materials and
technologies – including polycarbonate resins and bio derived
polyester as well as carbon fibre composites.
The car, known as PU_PA EV as in “pupa electric vehicle”, a
reference to metamorphosis weighs only 437 kg and embodies
Teijin’s vision of what a vehicle on the market in five to ten
years’ time will look like.
“Carbon Fibre in Cars: Concept or Future Megamarket” was
published by Textiles Intelligence in issue No 80 of Technical
Textile Markets.
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