The institute
FEMTO's news

Toward a new generation of recyclable composites

The PEPR RECYCOMP project, in collaboration with the FEMTO-ST Institute, is developing recyclable high-performance composites for a circular economy.

Composites, which combine a fibrous reinforcement (carbon, glass, flax, etc.) with a polymer matrix, offer both lightness and mechanical performance.  These materials are thus increasingly used in many industrial sectors such as aerospace, automotive, energy, and sports. However, recycling them by separating the fiber and matrix components—remains a complex challenge today, exacerbated by the ever-increasing volume of end-of-life materials.

As part of the PEPR (Priority Research Programs and Equipment) “Recycling, Recyclability, and Reuse of Materials,” the RECYCOMP project (ANR-22-PERE-0005) aims to address this major industrial and environmental challenge by developing a new generation of recyclable organic matrix composite materials without compromising mechanical performance.Bringing together nine research laboratories from across the country, this four-year project—which began in February 2023—explores two innovative approaches: supercritical solvolysis and twin-screw extrusion, using end-of-life components from wind turbine blades, ships, and automotive sandwich structures.  In addition, the project also proposes incorporating the recycling process into the material’s design from the outset. For example, flax fibers are first surface-treated with iron oxides to impart magnetic properties to them, enabling the selective recycling of their components.

The contribution of the FEMTO-ST Institute, through Adam LEVEZIEL’s thesis, is to characterize the interfacial properties of the materials developed in the RECYCOMP project at the micro-scale. Indeed, the fiber-matrix interface plays a crucial role in the mechanical performance of composites. To this end, a comprehensive study was conducted on the detachment of microdroplets from individual fibers. This test involves measuring, on a single fiber approximately 10 to 20 µm in diameter (thinner than a human hair), the force required to detach a microdroplet of polymer resin in order to evaluate the fiber-matrix bond in a composite.

In particular, an in situ device was developed with support from the MIMENTO, MIFHySTO, and AMETISTE platforms to enable this test to be conducted in an X-ray microtomograph and thus observe, for the first time in real time, the interfacial damage mechanisms responsible for the composite’s failure. The results obtained therefore provide a better understanding of the behavior of the fiber/matrix interface in the materials developed in the RECYCOMP project.

Ultimately, this research paves the way for the development of materials that are more durable, high-performance, and easier to recycle, addressing the environmental and industrial challenges of the future.

 
 
 
Read n° 168 of JEC COMPOSITES Magazine : https://digital-magazine.jeccomposites.com/
 
  • Engins spatiaux : un lubrifiant solide adapté à l'air comme au vide

    les engins spatiaux sont soumis à des contraintes extrêmes. Des chercheurs ont développé un prototype de lubrifiant solide qui ne souffre pas de l’oxydation à l’air libre et qui fonctionne mieux que les solutions actuelles dans le vide. Ces travaux ont abouti à un dépôt de brevet.

    Read more
  • FEMTO-ST : 2 full professors appointed to the IUF in its class 2022

    Ausrine MARGUERON-BARTASYTE and Daniel HISSEL are among the 164  national laureates appointed to the Institut Universitaire de France (IUF) by the Minister of Higher Education and Research

    Read more
  • Tribute to our colleague Philippe LUTZ

    Our scientific community of Burgundy-Franche-Comté has just suddenly lost Philippe LUTZ, full professor at the University of Franche-Comté and a leading figure in microrobotics and micromechatronics research at the FEMTO-ST laboratory.

    Read more
  • How to create a chemical bond with light?

    The formation of a chemical bond between two molecules often requires an activation process. Light is a stimulus that is particularly interesting

    Read more
  • Best student paper Award for Clément Carlé at the international conférence IFCS-EFTF2022

    This award was obtained in the "Microwave Frequency Standards" category of this major international conference in the field of time-frequency metrology, which took place in Paris from 24 to 28 April 2022.

    Read more
  • Daniel BRUNNER winner of an ERC Consolidator grant 2021

    Daniel BRUNNER is a CNRS researcher at the FEMTO-ST Institute and has been awarded a prestigious European Research Council Cosolidator Grant of 2M € for his INSPIRE project

    Read more
  • La formation CMI H3E mise à l’honneur

    Porté par Nadia Yousfi Steiner, le CMI H3E vient d’être récompensé par le trophée Hydrogénies pour la catégorie "Prix de la sensibilisation, de l’Education et de la Formation"

    Read more
  • Daniel HISSEL awarded as « Fellow » of the IEEE society

    Professor in Electrical Engineering at the University of Franche-Comté and researcher at FEMTO-ST, Daniel Hissel has been awarded as  for his work on hydrogen systems.

    Read more
  • March 8, International Women's Day

    "Freedom, like Science, and Women's Rights, are fundamental issues for Humanity."

    FEMTO-ST chooses to display on this day of March 8 (also charged with the serious news of the war in Ukraine), its commitment to each of these three issues.

    Read more
  • First experimental observation of the roton effect in metamaterials

    Experiments conducted jointly by FEMTO-ST and KIT demonstrate the control of forward and backward wave propagation by adjusting the frequency.

    Read more