Glass fibre strength: a review with relation to composite recycling
January 19, 2024
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Abstract
The recovery and reuse of glass fibres from manufacturing waste and end-of-life composites in an environmentally-friendly, cost-effective manner is one of the most important challenges facing the thermosetting polymer composites industry. A number of processes for recycling fibres from such materials are available or under development. However, nearly all options deliver recycled glass fibres that are not cost-performance competitive due to the huge drop in strength of recycled glass fibre compared to its original state. A breakthrough in the regeneration of recycled glass fibre performance has the potential to totally transform the economics of recycling such composites. This paper reviews the available knowledge of the thermally-induced strength loss in glass fibres, discusses some of the phenomena that are potentially related and presents the status of research into processes to regenerate the strength and value of such weak recycled glass fibres.
Author
James L. Thomason, Peter G. Jenkins, Liu Yang
Citation
James L. Thomason, Peter G. Jenkins, Liu Yang. (2016), Glass fibre strength: a review with relation to composite recycling. Fibers 4(2). doi.org/10.3390/fib4020018