CompositesWorld

OCT 2015

CompositesWorld

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Commercial carbon nanotube-enhanced prepregs and atmospheric plasma carbonization ovens for carbon fber manufacture top the trends, Europe's 2015 ofshore wind growth fgures top all, and Brazil tops South American neighbors in wind energy progress. Carbon nanotubes. They've have been around for 20 years, with attempts at commercialization for a decade. But until now, says Dr. Ryan Williams, senior scien- tist for N12 Technologies (Cambridge, MA, US), "companies have not seen the performance or scale promised." Selected as a 2015 Top Start-up by the Silicon Valley-based non-proft TIE50 global annual awards program, Williams' Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT, Cambridge, MA, US) spin-of frm aims to change that. "Our goal is to make sure our technology delivers on its promise," he says. N12 Technologies' NanoStitch and Surface Layer System (SLS) products are part of a new generation of nano- materials aimed at delivering macro- level benefts in products produced at commercial scale. N12 also focuses on the reinforcement, rather than the resin. Mixing CNTs into resin has presented real challenges, Williams claims, both to performance and part production scale up, because CNTs agglomerate, hindering optimal dispersion and orientation. "We put vertically aligned carbon nanotubes (VACNTs) at the interface of each lami- nate ply and align them so that the user doesn't have to do this," Williams explains, giving the analogy of chopped carbon fber vs. unidirectional prepreg. "You need not only the nanomaterial, but also placement and alignment in order to achieve high performance and light weight," he says. "We do this at the nano scale, but with a completely drop-in product. We don't expect the composites industry to modify its methods to use our products." (The photo shows a scan- ning electron microscope image of a NanoStitch vertically aligned CNT "forest.") Williams says that users can roll, cut and handle N12 NanoStitch prepreg during layup or on an automated tape laying machine just like other prepregs. Further N12 has, he says, "capacity now to deliver thousands of square meters of NanoStitch materials per year and have completed another round of fnancing to expand this capacity to millions of square meters within the next 3-4 years." N12 has commissioned a production-rate reactor for the aligned CNTs and has a plan for scaling production at reasonable CNT-enhanced prepregs: commercial & production-capable cost to support expanded industrial-scale supply. "We are working with a number of the large prepreg manufacturers to deliver NanoStitch-enhanced products — basically the prepregs already widely used in the industry — but with NanoStitch applied," Williams explains. "We are also devel- oping a resin flm delivery strategy, which gives the industry design freedom in what they do with the technology." For example, some companies want to apply the NanoStitch globally, while others want to locally reinforce a line of rivet holes or in a particular spot on a golf club shaft. N12 also aims to be as close to cost-neutral as possible. He explains, "For example, if you have a 64-ply laminate to meet performance requirements, our NanoStitch technol- ogy might achieve a 10% weight savings by boosting the performance, which then balances the additional cost of adding in the technology." He says the company has worked mostly with epoxies but also with phenolics, bis- maleimide and thermoplastics. It is already testing products with dozens of companies and has more than 100 diferent relationships established with potential customers, some in the very initial stages and others in physical component testing. N12 will exhibit its NanoStitch technology in Dallas at CAMX 2015. See CW's "CAMX 2015 Preview" on p. 44. Source | N12 Technologies Inc. / Photo | Dina Deresh OCTOBER 2015 22 CompositesWorld TRENDS

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