12 February 2010, Tokyo – Teijin Limited and the Tokyo
Institute of Technology have developed a highly crystalline carbon nanofiber
(CNF) which it says will offer 30% greater electrical conductivity than
conventional products. The extra-conductive CNF, which is 100-300 nanometres in
diameter and 20 micrometers long, has been developed with a melt-spinning
process.
Teijin says that since melt-spinning is widely used for the
production of ordinary chemical fibres, the newly developed CNF can be
manufactured by utilizing current manufacturing facilities, which will help to
minimize manufacturing costs. In addition, it is possible to manufacture CNF of
high purity because no catalyst is used during the production process, the
company says.
The primary application presently envisioned for the new CNF
is battery components, particularly lithium-ion batteries for electric
vehicles, including electrodes and additives for secondary batteries and
capacitors. Other likely uses include plastic additives and fuel-cell
gas-diffusion layers. Teijin aims to
commercialize the new CNF in 2011.
Teijin is a global technology-driven group operating in five
main fields: synthetic fibers (polyester fibers, carbon fibers and aramid
fibers); films and plastics; pharmaceuticals and home health care; trading and
retail; and IT and new products.
