29 January 2010, Tokyo - Teijin Techno Products Limited, the
core company of the Teijin Group's aramid fibres business, together with the
New Energy and Industrial Technology Development Organization (NEDO) and Hosokawa
Micron Corporation, have announced the development of a new fabric
incorporating nanostructure fibre for use in advanced fire fighting suits. Teijin Techno says the new
fabrics are 40% more effective in preventing burns than fabrics without
nanostructure fibre and 15% lighter than conventional heat-barrier linings.
The nanostructure fibre is made by kneading nano sized
carbon particles into Technora fibre, Teijin Techno Products’ high-performance para-aramid fibre offering high
strength, heat resistance, dimensional stability and chemical resistance.
According to Teijin Techno Products, the two basic functions
of fire fighting suits are flame and heat barrier properties and comfort to
alleviate fatigue and heatstroke. The company says that until now, it has been
technically difficult to combine both at a high level, but that the new fabric
realizes both functions in the heat-barrier layer, a lining serving as the
innermost of three layers in fire fighting suits.
The key development was the uniform dispersion of nano sized
carbon particles in Technora aramid fibre to substantially increase thermal
conductivity compared to ordinary aramid fibre, allowing the efficient
diffusion and radiation of heat reaching the inside of the suit. Teijin Techno
Products says its tests show that suits lined with the new fabric are 40%
better in preventing second and third degree burns compared to suits that do
not use nanostructure fibre. In addition, the fabric lowers the weight of the
heat-barrier layer by 15% compared to conventional linings capable of
equivalent heat resistance, Teijin Techno says.
The company says that the fabric satisfies both North American
heat-barrier performance standards, thought to be the world’s strictest for
fire fighting suits, and Japanese fire fighting suit standards, which are among
the worlds most demanding in terms of comfort.
Teijin Techno Products and Hosokawa Micron, working under
NEDO’s Research and Development of Nanodevices for Practical Utilization of
Nanotechnology (Nanotech Challenge Program), collaborated to create the fabric.
Hosokawa Micron developed nano particles with superior heat resistance that can
be uniformly dispersed in aramid fibre, and also established conditions for
manufacturing the nano particles. Teijin Techno Products developed the
nanostructure fibre by kneading the nano particles into Technora aramid fibre,
and it also developed the stack structure to enable the fabric to be used as a
lining in fire fighting suits.
Methods for analyzing and evaluating nanostructure fibre and
particle dispersion were developed through an industry-government-academic
collaboration led by Prof. Akihiko Tanioka at the Tokyo Institute of Technology
and Prof. Hidehiro Kamiya at the Tokyo University of Agriculture and
Technology.
Going forward, the two companies aim to establish technology
to mass produce the fabric for commercial use in fire fighting suits as soon as
possible. Meanwhile, they are attempting to knead different nano particles into
aramid fibre to realize new or enhanced properties, such as electric
conductivity and electromagnetic wave shielding, without impairing the
intrinsic properties of aramid fibre. In addition, Teijin techno says it should
be possible to improve combustion resistance and reduce heat shrinkage by
adding nano particles of titania (titanium dioxide) and silica inorganic
compounds. A variety of applications are expected to be found for advanced
materials made of these new nanostructure fibres, especially applications in
which organic materials cannot be used.