What Is Carbon Fiber?: Ntro To Arbon Iber
What Is Carbon Fiber?: Ntro To Arbon Iber
Even though carbon fiber has been in use for some time, most people are not very familiar with
what it is or how it’s made. This white paper will provide you with some basic information about
carbon fiber fabric and composites, where they come from and how they’re made.
Then, the fibers are heated to 400o-600oF in a process that adds oxygen molecules and
rearranges the atomic bonding pattern to convert their linear pattern to a more thermally
stable ladder bonding. After they’re stabilized, the fibers are heated to 2,000o-5,500oF in an
oxygen-free environment to expel non-carbon atoms from the material. The remaining pure
carbon atoms form long-chain, tightly bonded crystals that are parallel to the long axis of the
fiber. This is what gives the fibers their great strength.
The weaver loads the tows onto a loom where they are woven into a fabric. The most
common forms of fabric are:
*Protech Composites purchases all its carbon fiber fabric from weavers in the US.
At Protech, we use a UV-stabilized epoxy resin as our matrix for its low density and high
compression strength as well as the crystal clear clarity it adds to our gloss panels. The
epoxy brings rigidity to the strength of carbon fibers, creating an end product with
incredible material properties.
How is the gloss finish applied?
It isn’t! The deep, crystal clear, gloss finish on our products is created during the
manufacturing process – it’s not a secondary coating. It comes from using a very flat, very
smooth mold surface when we make a gloss product. As the resin permeates the carbon
fiber fabric, a thin layer contacts the mold surface and transfers that perfectly smooth
finish to the carbon fiber. The result is a mirror-like gloss finish.
What’s Prepreg?
Prepreg is a term used to describe a reinforcement, such as carbon fiber fabric, that has
been pre-impregnated with a matrix, such as epoxy resin. The fabric is coated on one or
both sides with an epoxy that cures when subjected to heat. Prepregs are typically shipped
and stored frozen to prolong the shelf life, and thawed to ambient temperature for
production.
On the other hand, if rigidity is your goal, a sandwich panel made with a Nomex
honeycomb, foam, or balsa core might be the answer. They are extremely rigid and
amazingly light weight.