MMaterialNews vom 15.12.2008

Carbon Nanofibers Cut Flammability of Upholstered Furniture

Carbon, the active ingredient in charcoal, is normally not considered a fire retardant, but researchers at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) have determined that adding a small amount of carbon nanofibers ...
to the polyurethane foams used in some upholstered furniture can reduce flammability by about 35 percent when compared to foam infused with conventional fire retardants.

Laws require mattresses and upholstered furniture sold in California and used in public spaces such as hotels and offices be treated with fire retardants or barrier fabrics to minimize fire fatalities and injuries and to cut damage costs. According to the National Fire Protection Association, the total burden of fire in the United States was about $270 billion in 2005.

Ten years ago, NIST scientists found that nanoclays could be used as an effective fire retardant additive, but researchers have been seeking alternatives because nanoclay flame retardants do not prevent the melting and dripping of polyurethane foam when exposed to a fire. This molten foam accelerates the burning rate by as much as 300 percent. “It also creates so much smoke that it is a life-safety hazard,” said Jeff Gilman, leader of the Materials Flammability Group in the Building and Fire Research Laboratory.

Researchers added carbon nanofibers to the foam because they knew that adding nanoparticles to a polymer normally increases the viscosity, so it doesn’t flow as easily. “The carbon nanofibers help prevent the foam from dripping in a pool under the furniture and increasing the fire intensity,” Gilman said. Studies of the foam after the experiments showed that carbon nanofibers seemed to create a thermally stable, entangled network that kept the foam from dripping.

NIST fire researchers have traditionally used upholstered furniture to study its flammability, but in this study, they developed a small-scale technique for evaluating the effect of dripping and pooling on foam flammability. About the size of a slice of toast, the foam samples were treated with one of six combinations of carbon nanofibers or conventional clay flame retardants. The foam “toast” was suspended vertically over a pan, ignited, and the amount of drip was measured. The foam with carbon nanofibers did not drip.

“These small-scale experiments correlate well with the fire behavior of larger foam samples and are easier and less expensive to conduct,” said Gilman. “The small-scale tests will allow us to cost-effectively perform more experiments and help us find an optimal fire retardant faster.”

“Carbon nanofibers are still more expensive than conventional flame retardant materials, but because the price is decreasing and so little needs to be used, they could soon be an affordable and effective option,” Gilman explained.

NIST fire scientists will continue to study the mechanisms that reduce flammability and dripping and work with chemical companies, nano-additive suppliers, flame retardant suppliers and foam manufacturers to test new blends of foam and carbon nanofibers to improve flame retardant material. Additionally, new work is planned to develop sustainable, environmentally friendly fire retardants using cellulosic nanofibers and testing other innovative fire retardant approaches.

Source: NIST.

Recherchiert und dokumentiert von:

Dr.-Ing. Christoph Konetschny, Materialberater, Inhaber Materialsgate
Die Recherche und Aufbereitung der in diesem Dokument genannten Daten erfolgte mit größter Sorgfalt.
Für die Richtigkeit, Gültigkeit, Verfügbarkeit und Anwendbarkeit der genannten Daten übernehmen wir zu keinem Zeitpunkt die Haftung.
Bitte diskutieren Sie die Verwendung und Eignung für Ihren konkreten Anwendungsfall mit den Experten der genannten Institution.

Sie wünschen Material- und Technologierecherchen zu diesem Thema?

Materialsgate steht für hochwertige Werkstoffberatung und innovative Materialrecherchen.
Nutzen Sie unseren Beratungsservice

MMehr zu diesem Thema

Engineers and scientists at The University of Texas at Austin have achieved a breakthrough in the use of a one-atom thick structure called "graphene" as a new ...
carbon-based material for storing electrical charge in ultracapacitor devices, perhaps paving the way for the massive installation of renewable energies such as wind and solar power. The researchers believe their breakthrough shows promise that graphene (a form of carbon) could eventually double the capacity of existing ultracapacitors, which are manufactured using an entirely different form of carbon. "Through such a device, electrical charge can be rapidly stored on the graphene sheets... mehr
Using one of the world’s most powerful sources of man-made radiation, physicists from UC San Diego, Columbia University and Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory ...
have uncovered new secrets about the properties of graphene—a form of pure carbon that may one day replace the silicon in computers, televisions, mobile phones and other common electronic devices. Graphene—a single layer of carbon atoms arranged in a honeycombed lattice—has a number of advantages over silicon. Because it is an optically transparent conductor of electricity, graphene could be used to replace current liquid crystal displays that employ thin metal-oxide films based on indium... mehr
Since the discovery of buckyballs and carbon nanotubes, there has been intense interest inpreparing carbon materials of various morphologies and structures.
Now, graduate student Sara E. Skrabalak and chemistry professor Kenneth S. Suslick at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign have discovered a way to prepare porous carbon sponges by heating a chemical mist from an ordinary home humidifier. The prepared materials have much larger pores than conventional carbon materials and could thus be used in adsorbent, catalytic and electrochemical applications in which large molecules are involved. This new route to mesoporous (2 to 20 nanometers... mehr
RSS
facebook
xing
twitter
linkedin

MaterialCards Weekly

Ihr persönlicher und kostenfreier Material-Reminder - wöchentlich per E-Mail

Service:
Material­cha­rak­teri­sierung und Werkstoffprüfung

Sie benötigen leistungsfähigste Methoden der Material­cha­rak­teri­sierung und Werk­stoff­prü­fung zur Optimierung Ihrer Produkte?
Schadensanalyse von Bauteilen
Automotive Testing
Thermographie
Korrosionstests
Charakterisierung von Nanobeschichtungen
Prüfung von Werkstoffen der Elektrotechnik
Charakterisierung von Composites
Metallographie
Keramographie
Charakterisierung von Fügetechnologien
Charakterisierung von Coatings
Prüfung von Kunststoffen
Untersuchung von Diffusionsschichten
Medizintechnische Untersuchungen
Gefüge-Analytik
Bruchmechanik
Barriere-Eigenschaften
Schadensanalyse von Produkten
Element-Mapping
Charakterisierung von Katalysatoren
Schadensanalyse von Bauteilen
Automotive Testing
Thermographie
Korrosionstests
Charakterisierung von Nanobeschichtungen
Prüfung von Werkstoffen der Elektrotechnik
Charakterisierung von Composites
Metallographie
Keramographie
Charakterisierung von Fügetechnologien
Charakterisierung von Coatings
Prüfung von Kunststoffen
Untersuchung von Diffusionsschichten
Medizintechnische Untersuchungen
Gefüge-Analytik
Bruchmechanik
Barriere-Eigenschaften
Schadensanalyse von Produkten
Element-Mapping
Charakterisierung von Katalysatoren
Kontaktieren Sie uns – Wir leiten Ihre Fragestellung an einen unserer Kooperationspartner weiter, die alle anerkannte und zertifizierte Prüf­la­bore mit modernster Ausstattung be­treiben.

Empfohlene Literatur

Annick Loiseau et al.
Springer, Berlin
A.M. Mannion
Kluwer Academic Pub

Empfohlene MaterialCards

Materialsgate Glossar

Carbon
Umgangssprachlicher Begriff zur Kennzeichnung von Materialien und Werkstoffen auf der Basis von kohlenstofffaserverstärkten Kunststoffen (CFK).
NIST
Abkürzung für die US-Behörde National Institute of Standards and Technology. Das NIST befasst sich mit technischen Standardisierungsprozessen und kann als das amerikanische Gegenstück zur Physikalisch-Technische Bundesanstalt (PTB) angesehen werden.