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Toward a circular economy: zero-waste manufacturing of carbon fiber-reinforced thermoplastic composites

Engineering and Technology

Toward a circular economy: zero-waste manufacturing of carbon fiber-reinforced thermoplastic composites

P. R. Barnett, N. S. Hmeidat, et al.

Discover groundbreaking research by Philip R. Barnett, Nadim S. Hmeidat, Bingqian Zheng, and Dayakar Penumadu, as they tackle the limitations of current recycling technologies in fiber-reinforced composites. This innovative work demonstrates how recycled carbon fibers and polyphenylene sulfide can be remanufactured while maintaining fiber length and reducing variability, paving the way for a more sustainable future in composite remanufacturing.... show more
Abstract
Fiber-reinforced composites are becoming ubiquitous as a way of lightweighting in the wind, aerospace, and automotive industries, but current recycling technologies fall short of a circular economy. In this work, fiber-reinforced composites made of recycled carbon fiber and polyphenylene sulfide were recycled and remanufactured using common processing technologies such as compression and injection molding. An industrially viable size-exclusive sieving technique was used to retain fiber length and reduce variability in the mechanical properties of the remanufactured composites. Fiber length reduction alone could not explain the strength reductions apparent in the composites, which we propose are due to microstructural inhomogeneity as defined by poor dispersion of the fibers. Future recycling efforts must focus on fiber length retention and good dispersion to make composite remanufacturing a viable path toward a circular economy.
Publisher
npj Materials Sustainability
Published On
Mar 11, 2024
Authors
Philip R. Barnett, Nadim S. Hmeidat, Bingqian Zheng, Dayakar Penumadu
Tags
recycling
fiber-reinforced composites
carbon fiber
remanufacturing
polyphenylene sulfide
microstructural inhomogeneity
fiber length retention
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