Properties of Carbon Fiber
Introduction
To the beginner or inexperienced user of carbon fiber, understanding carbon fiber and the properties of carbon fiber is often challenging. To some, it is a mysterious material. That is why we are here. Clearwater Composites is an expert at carbon fiber and composite materials. We understand the materials down the fiber level and we know how best to tailor the carbon fiber design to achieve your needs. And, it is our intent to educate our customers, and the community at large, as best possible, as we strongly believe that the more engineers, designers, students, hobbyists and the public-at-large learn and understand about carbon fiber, the more widespread it's use will become.
Key Factors in Determining Properties of Carbon Fiber
The properties of a carbon fiber part are dependent on a number of factors. One important consideration is knowing the direction of the property of interest. Unlike metals, carbon fiber, and composites in general, are called anisotropic materials. That means the properties of the material are directionally dependent. For an easy analogy, think of a piece of wood. The strength of the wood is dependent on the orientation of the grain. This is true with carbon fiber - the strength of the carbon fiber is dependent on the orientation of the fiber (grain). On the other hand, metals, plastics, and most common materials have the same properties in every direction. They are called isotropic materials.
In addition to being directionally dependent (anisotropic), there are many other factors in determining the properties of carbon fiber. Some of the key factors are:
- Type of carbon fiber and resin
- Fiber to resin ratio (fiber amount, fiber volume)
- Fiber form - unidirectional, fabric, braid, chopped
- Fiber orientation - fiber layup design
- Quality - Uniformity of fiber distribution, voids, etc
Design Options - Tailored Properties
All of the factors above, or design options, are a unique advantage of carbon fiber and advanced composite materials. A part using carbon fiber can be tailored and designed for a specific application. The fiber type, fiber amount, fiber orientation, etc can all be changed to achieve certain properties, whether for mechanical reasons (strength, stiffness) or for other reasons, such as low CTE (coefficient of thermal expansion). Metals and other materials do not have this tailor ability. For example, on a metal part, the only thing that can be changed is the grade or alloy of metal and it's thickness or shape. That's it.
Because there are literally thousands and thousands of options when it comes to carbon fiber, it is impossible to list and explain all of the potential properties of carbon fiber.
Nevertheless, the table below is shown for comparison purposes to help the end-user get a better understanding of the properties of the more common designs of carbon fiber sold by Clearwater Composites. The properties of other common materials are also shown for comparison purposes.
Table - Properties of Common Carbon Fiber Composite Designs vs. Metals
Material |
Grade / Type |
Design / Application |
Tensile Strength |
Tensile |
Shear Modulus |
Density |
Carbon Fiber/Epoxy (Unidirectional) |
Standard Modulus |
Bending | 300 | 15 | 0.6 | 1.55 |
Carbon Fiber/Epoxy (Unidirectional) | Standard Modulus | Torsion | 20 | 2.2 | 4.5 | 1.55 |
Carbon Fiber/Epoxy (Unidirectional) | Intermediate Modulus | Bending | 325 | 20 | 0.6 | 1.57 |
Carbon Fiber/Epoxy (Unidirectional) | High Modulus | Bending | 250 | 30 | 0.6 | 1.59 |
Steel |
4130 |
100 | 30 | 12 | 7.7 | |
Titanium | 6M-4V | 120 | 16 | 6.2 | 4.34 | |
Aluminum | 6061-T6 | 35 | 10 | 3.8 | 2.7 |
Note: Properties of carbon fiber are dependent on the direction and the properties shown above are ONLY valid for one direction, typically referred to as the longitudinal direction.