Aniruddh Vashisth holds a sample of the new healable carbon-fiber composite material. Photo: Andy Freeberg/University of Washington.
Aniruddh Vashisth holds a sample of the new healable carbon-fiber composite material. Photo: Andy Freeberg/University of Washington.

Because of their high strength and light weight, carbon-fiber-based composite materials are gradually replacing metals for advancing all kinds of products and applications, from airplanes to wind turbines to golf clubs. But there’s a trade-off: once damaged or compromised, the most commonly used carbon fiber materials are nearly impossible to repair or recycle.

In a paper in Carbon, a team of researchers describes a new type of carbon-fiber-reinforced material that is as strong and light as traditionally used materials but can be repeatedly healed with heat, reversing any fatigue damage. This also provides a way to break the composite material down and recycle it when it reaches the end of its life.

"Developing fatigue-resistant composites is a major need in the manufacturing community," said co-lead author Aniruddh Vashisth, assistant professor of mechanical engineering at the University of Washington. "In this paper, we demonstrate a material where either traditional heat sources or radio frequency heating can be used to reverse and postpone its aging process indefinitely."

The material is part of a recently developed group known as carbon-fiber-reinforced vitrimers, named after the Latin word for glass, which show a mix of solid and fluid properties. The materials typically used today, whether in sporting goods or aerospace, are carbon-fiber-reinforced polymers.

Traditional carbon-fiber-reinforced polymers typically fall into two categories: thermoset or thermoplastic. The 'set' variety contains an epoxy, a glue-like material where the chemical links holding it together harden permanently. The 'plastic' version contains a softer type of glue, allowing it to be melted back down and reworked, but this becomes a drawback for high strength and stiffness. Vitrimers on the other hand, can link, unlink and relink, providing a middle ground between the two.

"Imagine each of these materials is a room full of people," Vashisth said. "In the thermoset room, all of the people are holding hands and won't let go. In the thermoplastic room, people are shaking hands and moving all around. In the vitrimer room people shake hands with their neighbor but they have the capacity to exchange handshakes and make new neighbors so that the total number of interconnections remains the same. That reconnection is how the material gets repaired and this paper was the first to use atomic-scale simulations to understand the underlying mechanisms for those chemical handshakes."

The research team believes vitrimers could be a viable alternative for many products currently manufactured from thermosets, something badly needed because thermoset composites have begun piling up in landfills. The team says that healable vitrimers would represent a major shift toward a dynamic material with a different set of considerations in terms of life-cycle cost, reliability, safety and maintenance.

"These materials can translate the linear lifecycle of plastics to a circular one, which would be a great step toward sustainability," said co-senior author Nikhil Koratkar, professor of mechanical, aerospace and nuclear engineering at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute.

This story is adapted from material from the University of Washington, with editorial changes made by Materials Today. The views expressed in this article do not necessarily represent those of Elsevier. Link to original source.