For release November 23, 2005CONGRESS
APPROPRIATES $1 MILLION FOR UTSI’S CARBON FIBER RESEARCH
In action awaiting the President’s signature, Congress has
approved $1 million to support continued low cost carbon fiber
research at The University of Tennessee Space Institute.
U.S. Senators Bill Frist and Lamar Alexander announced that this
appropriation is included in a conference report containing
newly approved money for transportation and economic development
initiatives across Tennessee.
The funding for 2006 “means that we can buy highly specialized
and needed additional equipment for our UTSI carbon fiber
laboratory and also move ahead with our research efforts towards
developing these technologies for commercial applications,” said
Dr. Ahmad D. Vakili, professor of Aerospace and Mechanical
Engineering, who is heading the project at UTSI.
Vakili and his team of colleagues have been gradually and
deliberately running “shakedown” tests of the spin lab equipment
that was donated to UTSI by ConocoPhillips last December and
installed in a laboratory called the “UTSI carbon fiber spin
lab” on the Institute’s campus. “The equipment has performed
very well, as expected,” Vakili said.
Dr. John E. Caruthers, UT associate vice president and UTSI’s
chief operating officer, and Dr. Joel W. Muehlhauser, UT
assistant vice president and dean of research at the Institute,
joined Vakili in expressing appreciation to Senators Frist and
Alexander for their strong support of the carbon fiber project.
“Congressman Lincoln Davis also has been an enthusiastic
supporter of this research and development project,” added
Caruthers, noting that the Congressman recently visited the lab
where the research is under way and commented on the potentials
for the carbon fiber technology.
Muehlhauser says UTSI’s research work will have a “major impact
on the manufacturing economy.”
Vakili plans to demonstrate that the pitch-based carbon fiber (a
by-product of the petroleum distillation processes) can be
produced at a much lower cost than other competing technologies
and therefore can be used for many technologies that are not
economically viable now.
Its many varied potential uses include the manufacture of
light-weight but strong and tough components for aircraft and
automobiles. “Our fibers are basic materials made cheaper and
simpler to be used extensively to conserve fuel,” Vakili
stresses. “When you save weight, you save energy.”
Multi applications of the technology are a major focus in the
Institute’s lab efforts, and Vakili has been impressed by the
variety of firms expressing interest in the work. He also
emphasizes the positive environmental impact of taking the
leftovers from asphalt materials and spinning strands of carbon
fiber for conversion into useful materials.
UTSI is also making specific efforts to collaborate with UT
Knoxville and the Oak Ridge National Laboratory in the venture.
Potential of the pitch-based carbon fiber has “already been
developed and demonstrated in a research spin lab,” Vakili said.
While focusing on its numerous applications, Vakili says, “We
also want to cultivate commercial partners who might help the
potential for other multi-faceted industrial use. We are anxious
to begin establishing Middle Tennessee as a center for
pitch-based carbon fiber application technologies.”
The funding for the second year “will keep us on track in our
desire to reach these goals within about three to five years,”
Vakili said.
The U.S. Department of Transportation provided $950,000 to get
the lab established, equipment installed, and staff assembled.
Just before Christmas last year, ConocoPhillips delivered
several truck loads of equipment to UTSI and has since donated
intellectual properties (patents) and information gleaned from
early research efforts to the Institute.
Vakili’s past involvement with the ConocoPhillips carbon fiber
program and in helping the U.S. fiber industry solve problems –
including how to mass produce fibers efficiently – led to
ConocoPhillips’ helping UTSI to continue the research. #

Dr. Ahmad Vakili of Tullahoma, left, explains the
workings of some of the equipment in the carbon fiber
lab to Dr. Joel W. Muehlhauser, Manchester.

Dr. Joel W. Muehlhauser takes a look at
the spin process as Peter Sherrouse, left, of Manchester,
and Joel Davenport of Tullahoma discuss work in the carbon
fiber lab at UTSI.
-- UTSI Photos Writer: Weldon Payne (931) 393-7222
wpayne@utsi.edu
|