The Drive for Lightweight Cars
By 2016, the US car industry will need to average 34.5 mpg
and by 2025, cars will need to average 54.5 mpg. In order to meet these new
requirements, manufacturers will have to implement a number of changes including
new engines, technologies, and materials. Lightweight materials are one of the
most important avenues to pursue because for every 10% reduction in
weight, fuel efficiency is increased by 6–7%.
The Benefits of
Composites
Carbon fiber composites are as strong as steel, while
weighing over 75% less. The materials are the lightest to use and also the
stiffest. Because of their superior mechanical characteristics, cars built using
carbon fibers are some of the lightest, fastest, and most fuel efficient
vehicles on the road. Composites can also absorb a large amount of energy
before failure, which can make new lighter vehicles just as safe as their
heavier counterparts. The only drawback is that composite materials are three
times more expensive to make, meaning adoption will be slow until the price
comes down. Despite the high cost, composites have been used in cars for over
30 years and are now being used for the first mass produced composite vehicles.
Composites in Use
Carbon fiber was first used in high performance vehicles
such as the McLaren MP4/1, the first Formula One car to feature a carbon fiber
chassis. The low weight and increased strength helped make the car one of the
lightest, stiffest, and fastest to grace the track in 1981. The use of composites
also allowed the engineers to design a safety cell for the driver, which would
remain intact in the event of a crash, making previously fatal crashes
survivable.
Over the ten years from 1981 to 1991, carbon fiber was used
only on racecars because they were the only customers willing to pay the high
cost for increased performance. The first carbon fiber vehicle to be sold to
the public was the McLaren F1 in 1992. The million dollar sports car was built
to be used on public roads but was truly at home on the track, hitting top
speeds of over 200 mph and boasting a 0–60 time of just 3.2 seconds. Even with
these impressive numbers, the car only weighed about 2,500 pounds (significantly
less than most consumer vehicles) because of the low weight of carbon fiber.
Now carbon fiber can be found in many consumer vehicles from high-end manufacturers, but these vehicles are either low volume (such as the 400 unit Bugatti Veyron) or only use a small amount of carbon fiber.
Next year will mark a new milestone in automotive carbon fiber as BMW will begin selling the i3, the first mass produced car with a carbon fiber chassis. While previous cars used carbon fiber to save weight and go faster, the new BMW i3 will use carbon fiber to save weight and go farther. The all-electric car will tip the scales at 2,700 pounds—including the large battery needed to give it a range of 80–100 miles.
These new cars may be the first of their kind, but they
won’t be the last.
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