More sustainable carbon fibre? Professor Milo Shaffer, Agi Brandt-Talbot (Imperial) and Pascale Launois (CNRS) project.

Spinning sustainable carbon fibres for the energy transition

A CNRS-Imperial joint PhD project conducted by:

Prof Milo Shaffer – Imperial PI

Dr Agi Brandt-Talbot – Imperial PI

Prof Pascale Launois – CNRS PI

Enny Tran – Imperial PhD student

Lucie Dieval – PhD student CNRS 

Take a high end bike that is enviably light, so light in fact that you can lift it with one hand. The chances are it is made from carbon fibre, a material which dates back to the 1870s when it was first used for filament lightbulbs. Making new materials or improving on the old ones is a slow process. It requires a diverse set of skills to first synthesise and then test its capabilities. A case in point: carbon fibre’s incredible strength for its weight was only realised a full hundred years after its synthesis. Early experiments subjected natural fibres like cotton and silk to high temperatures, transforming their atomic structure to a more carbon rich, crystalline one, in a processes known as graphitisation. But today, the building blocks come from fossil fuels. In this project, natural fibres once again take centre stage as researchers from the CNRS and Imperial College London aim to make an old material in new, more sustainable ways.

To discover more about the project listen to the International Relations Office podcast "Voices of International Collaborations".

Voices of International Collaborations, Episode 1: Sustainable Carbon Fibers (Imperial/CNRS)

Discover more about the project