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Table of Contents
 
Introduction
Registered Trademarks and Trade Names
High-Performance Reinforcing Fibers
Overview
Boron Fibers
Manufacturing Processes
Producing Companies
Salient Statistics
Consumption
Aircraft/Aerospace
Sports Equipment
Other
Price
Trade
Ceramic Reinforcing Fibers
Manufacturing Processes
Producing Companies
United States
Europe
Japan
Production
Consumption
Continuous Ceramic Fibers
Silicon carbide monofilament
Silicon carbide and silicon nitride fibers
Alumina-based continuous fibers
Alumina and Alumina-Silica Discontinous Fibers
Other
Price
Whiskers
Producing Companies
Consumption
Silicon Carbide and Silicon Nitride Whiskers
Potassium Titanate and Aluminum Borate Whiskers
Other
Price
Ceramic-Coated Reinforcing Fibers
High-temperature insulation wools
Overview
Alkaline Earth-Silicate Wools
Aluma-Silica Wools
Polycrystalline Wools
Environmental and health Issues
United States
Europe
Japan
Manufacturing Processes
Supply and Demand by Region
United States
Producing companies
Production
Consumption
Price
Trade
Europe
Producing companies
AES wools and alumina-silica
Polycrystalline wools
Production
Consumption
Price
Japan
Producing companies
Alumina-silica wools
AES wools
Polycrystalline wools
Consumption
Price
Other Regions
Silica Fibers
Manufacturing Processes
Producing Companies
Leached Silica Fibers
Drawn Silica Fibers
Production
Consumption
Leached Silica Fiber
Drawn Silica Fiber
Dry-Spun Silica Fiber
Price
Alumina-Boria-Silica Fibers
Nextel Ceramics Fibers
Overview
Producing Companies
Consumption
Industrial Fibers
Composite Fibers
Nonwoven Fibers
Price
Rubilon Fibers
Zirconia Fibers
Overview
Producing Companies
Consumption
Price
Metal and Metal-Coated Fibers
Overview
Metal Fibers
Manufacturing Processes
Producing Companies
Consumption
Stainless Steel, Nickel and Alloy Fibers
Refractory Metal Fibers
Aluminum Flake and Fiber
Metal Fibers for Friction Materials
Metal Fibers for Concrete Reinforcement
Price
Metal-Coated Fibers
Aluminum-Coated Glass Fibers
Other
High-Temperature Superconducting Fibers
Overview
Manufacturing Processes
Producing Companies
United States
Europe
Japan
Other Asia
Price
Outlook
   
  Specialty Inorganic Fibers
   
  Bala Suresh with Stefan Schlag and Kazuteru Yokose
  Published August 2008
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  Abstract
   
 

This product review presents information on inorganic fibers other than glass and carbon fibers. The fibers covered include

  • High-performance reinforcing fibers (boron fibers, ceramic fibers and whiskers)
  • High-temperature insulation wools
  • Silica fibers
  • Alumina-boria-silica fibers
  • Zirconia fibers
  • Metal and metal-conducting fibers
  • High-temperature superconducting fibers

There is some crossover from one category to another, such as high-temperature insulation wools used as reinforcements. Increasingly, fibers are valued for some combination of their mechanical, thermal and electrical properties. Carbon, glass and aramid fibers are considered only as they relate competitively to the subject mate­rials. However, metal-coated glass, graphite and aramid fibers are discussed here.

It is necessary to report a diversity of information to adequately cover the wide ranges of manufacturing processes, applications and states of development of these fibers and wools. Consumption volumes vary from negligible amounts for certain developmental reinforcing or metal fibers to millions of kilograms for alumina-silica wools. However, certain issues are common to all these materials: the challenge of creating fibers from nonductile materials, the importance of fiber surface modification and the proper­ties of composites relative to homogeneous materials. Data for the major producing world regions are included in each of the fiber and wool sections.

High-performance reinforcing fibers (boron fibers, ceramic fibers and whiskers) can be used as reinforcements in polymer, metal and ceramic matrices. The high strength-to-weight and modulus-to-weight (i.e., stiffness-to-weight) ratios of the fibers allow the fabrication of composite materials that are superior in physical properties to much heavier homogeneous metal materials.

High-temperature insulation wools are man-made mineral wools suitable for use as heat-insulating materials above 600°C. They are used principally for insulating and refractory qualities in the absence of heavy mechanical loading. They are used primarily in the form of blankets, boards or modules as insulation and refractory materials for furnace linings and related applications (alumina-silica, alumina and zirconia).

Silica fibers are high-purity silicon dioxide (greater than 94% SiO2) materials that are used in a variety of insulation, heat-protection and reinforcement applications for both industrial and aerospace industries. They have high mechanical strength against pulling and even bending, provided that the fiber is not too thick and that the surfaces are well prepared. The mechanical strength of a fiber can be further improved with a suitable polymer jacket. Cleaving silica fiber ends can also provide nicely flat surfaces with sufficient optical quality to meet requirements for aerospace applications.

Zirconia fibers, based on zirconium dioxide, are high-performance/high-cost ceramic refractory fibers that exhibit maximum use temperatures significantly exceeding those of most other commercially available refractory fibers. The maximum use temperature for the highest-performance zirconia product exceeds that of alumina board by as much as 450°C. Additionally, zirconia fiber products show excellent resistance to chemical attack and good thermal insulation properties.

This product review discusses metal fibers made of low-carbon steel, stainless steel, nickel and various alloys and metal-coated fibers, which include glass, carbon or aramid fibers that are coated with nickel, aluminum, copper or other metals. In addition, specialty aluminum flake is discussed, since it is manu­factured by a process similar to that used to make glass or textile fibers.

Since their discovery in 1986, high-temperature superconducting (HTS) ceramics have captured the imagination of the scientific and business communities with their potential in transportation, electrical power generation and many other commercial and technical applications. Ultimate commercialization must cost-effectively overcome inherent problems of brittle-ceramic material fabrication without compromising the intrinsic HTS properties. If fabrication and application development problems were overcome, the market for HTS fibers could grow rapidly.

 
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