NATURAL fibres such as
hemp can replace costly aramid fibres in brake pads, with no loss of performance
and less impact on the environment, according to re - search by the Sustainable
Technologies Initiative (STI). Brake pads are one of the key components in the
race to develop greener transport, with 80m sets used in the UK alone every year. Since the use of asbestos was phased out in the 1980s, most have been
formulated using aramid fibres. They also incorporate significant amounts of
heavy metal compounds. Around 20,000 tonnes of dust containing these materials
are discharged into the environment as the pads wear. New research into
eco-friendly brake pads, backed by the STI, has shown how a switch to natural fibres,
such as hemp, could offer a more sustainable solution. In the Ecopad project,
re - search ers demonstrated how renewable fibres can reduce reliance on
synthetic materials and allow heavy metal constituents to be replaced with
safer alternatives. The outcome is expected to provide up-to-date solutions to the global transport
industry and its friction material supply base. Our STI research promises the
creation of an important future application and new market for natural fibre
crops, said project leader Dr Luke Savage of the University of Exeter. Ecopad combines greener transport with greatly reduced costs for friction product
manufacturers. With no loss of braking performance, the attractions are obvious
and there has already been a great deal of interest from manufacturers and the
public.
Following positive
test results, Commercial development is going ahead, initially for the railway industry.
The main end-user, European Friction Industries (EFI), is particularly interested
in exploiting the use of hemp in train brakes. Customers in Norway and other parts of Europe want to remove the use of sintered metal brakes that result in
heavy metals getting into the environment. Interest is also expected from
operators of underground and metro lines because of health concerns over
airborne brake dust in enclosed spaces.
The Ecopad research
brought together the team from the University of Exeters Advanced Technologies
Department (X-AT) and a consortium of industrial partners representing brake
pad manufacturers, suppliers and end-users. It was supported by the UKs Department of Trade & Industry (now the Department for Business, Enterprise and Regulatory Reform)
through the STI programme. The researchers demonstrated how hemp fibre can be
technically enhanced and processed to replace a significant proportion of
synthetic fibres and resins.
Experiments showed the
new blends offered the same frictional performance as pads made using pure
aramid fibre. Further, the natural materials can cut production costs by
significant margin. Aramid fibre costs 20-30 times more than hemp fibre and it
stands out as by far the most expensive ingredient that goes to make up a brake
pad, explained Savage. It can also be hard to get hold of in the quantities
required by the friction industry. When you are talking about a train brake
block, which is very much larger than a car brake pad, then the figures really
start to add up. The winning formulation contains hemp fibre processed to enhance
its performance combined with a new environmentally friendly lubricant, Enviro-Lube,
produced by PBW Metal products.
The new material,
which avoids the use of heavy metals, was also developed with STI support in
the Tibrake project. Based on a tin compound, it offers an alternative to lead
and antimony friction modifiers, which are associated with health concerns. Results
clearly indicate that disc pads for the VW Golf made using the Ecopad
formulation readily achieved the required level of performance. The researchers
found they could easily match the results of the benchmark formula containing
aramid fibre and antimony trisulphide. The first disc pads for cars have
already been on show to the public at the 2007 Sexy Green Car Show at the UKs Eden Project. The technology offers a solution that could be available off the shelf,
should future legislation affect the use of heavy metals, such as antimony and
lead, or raise concerns over dust from aramid fibres. There is undoubtedly a
viable market for cars as well, said Savage. All our testing was directed at
car braking systems from the outset, where the experimental materials developed
gave com parable frictional performance. Manufacturers want to be in a
position where they have got a sustainable product they can immediately use to
replace conventional materials if necessary.
References:
www.sustainabletechnologies.ac.uk
www.exeter.ac.uk
www.efiltd.co.uk
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