Super car made out of fruit fibres
March 29th, 2011 - 5:19 pm ICT by IANSLondon, March 29 (IANS) Super strong yet light weight cars made from the fibres of pineapples and bananas could be a possibility within two years.
In what promises to be the ultimate green development, researchers in Brazil are using plant fibres to build a new generation of car bodies as well as engine parts.
The plastics, which are strengthened by the fruit fibres, are already being tested by manufacturers who believe they could be used in cars within two years, the Daily Mail reports.
Alcides Leao from Sao Paulo State University said reinforcing plastic with microscopic fibres from delicate fruits such as pineapples and bananas made them super-strong.
“The properties of these plastics are incredible,” he told the American Chemical Society in Anaheim, California.
“They are light, but very strong - 30 percent lighter and three to four times stronger than regular plastic. We believe that a lot of car parts, including dashboards, bumpers and side panels, will be made of nano-sized fruit fibres in the future.”
Some of the fibres were almost as stiff as Kevlar, the super-strong material used to make bullet-proof vests and lightweight armour, he said.
The fibre-reinforced plastics are also more impervious to heat, spilled petrol, water and oxygen than ordinary automotive plastics.
“We believe that a lot of car parts, including dashboards, bumpers and side panels, will be made of nano-sized fruit fibres in the future. For one thing, they will help reduce the weight of cars, and that will improve fuel economy.”
Plant fibres from wood have been used for centuries to make paper.
But recently scientists have discovered that intensive processing of wood releases ultra-small ‘nano’ cellulose fibres so small that 50,000 could fit across the width of a single human hair.
- Soon, 'green' cars made from pineapples, bananas! - Mar 28, 2011
- Germanium 'tissue paper' could stop a bullet, power an iPod - Apr 28, 2010
- Coming soon: Body armour that is tougher than bullet proof Kevlar - Oct 23, 2010
- Scientists discover new method to create atom-thin 'nanosheets' - Feb 04, 2011
- Coming soon: Stronger, more durable plastic consumer products - Oct 21, 2010
- Air India gets first Dreamliner from Nikki Haley's state - Apr 28, 2012
- New high-performance fiber promises better bulletproof vests, airplanes - Dec 04, 2010
- Now, a futuristic fuel efficient lightweight car - Sep 13, 2011
- Boeing's Dreamliner, wanted by India, debuts at Farnborough - Jul 19, 2010
- Now, nano-based technology that can make PCs, net hundreds of times faster - May 04, 2010
- Scientists unravel secrets of strong spider silk - Mar 02, 2011
- Researchers working on plastic from banana plants - Oct 10, 2009
- Indian-American developing lighter, blast-proof glass - Sep 11, 2009
- Researchers create novel, self-healing autonomous material - Dec 08, 2010
- Now, a paper thats nearly as tough as steel! - Jul 07, 2008
Tags: american chemical society, anaheim california, bullet proof vests, bumpers, car bodies, daily mail, development researchers, fibre reinforced plastics, fuel economy, human hair, kevlar, leao, london march, paulo state university, pineapples, plant fibres, sao paulo state, sao paulo state university, sized fruit, weight cars