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Dr Stephen Hawkins with a reel of carbon nanotube yarn
Dr Stephen Hawkins with a reel of carbon nanotube yarn.

Carbon nanotubes could go antiballistic

Reference: 07/220
CSIRO has been granted A$2 million under the Defence Capability and Technology Demonstrator (CTD) Program to demonstrate the capabilities of carbon nanotubes as strong, lightweight antiballistic materials.
1 November 2007

Principal Research Scientist with CSIRO Materials Science & Engineering, Dr Stephen Hawkins, says currently available body armour is typically heavy, stiff and hot to wear.

“Generations of polymers and ceramics have been developed to keep pace with the threat and lessen the burden of the armour but now a new material – carbon nanotubes or CNTs – is set to move ballistic protection into new territory,” he says.

CSIRO’s Carbon Nanotubes for Ballistic Protection project was one of eight selected as part of the latest round of Defence CTD Program funding announced last night.

Dr Hawkins says CNTs are amongst the first of the new wave of nano-structured materials and offer extraordinary properties of strength, stiffness and lightness. 

“The challenge is to capture the potential of these new materials at the macro level.  CNTs are fibres of pure carbon that are only 1 to 100 nanometres in diameter but up to millimetres in length. Synthesising and manipulating these myriad tiny fibres into ordered structures requires a combination of novel processing skills coupled with a fundamental understanding of fibre behaviour, Dr Hawkins said.

“To give a sense of scale, a human hair is typically 100 microns, or 100,000 nanometres in diameter.  If hair had the same proportions as nanotubes, it would be from tens to hundreds of metres long, with a great capacity for tangling!” 

CSIRO has established a capability to produce very highly specified CNTs with the unique characteristic of being able to be drawn directly into yarn.  This in combination with other advanced materials will form the basis of the new antiballistic structures. 

“No single material has all of the properties required for ballistic protection, so a successful application of CNTs would see them as part of an integrated system with greater strength and flexibility and reduced weight,” Dr. Hawkins says. 

“CNTs are fibres of pure carbon that are only 1 to 100 nanometres in diameter but up to millimetres in length.”
Source: Dr Stephen Hawkins

Chief Defence Scientist, Dr Roger Lough, announced the funding at the annual Capability and Technology Program Dinner held in Canberra.

The CTD Program, managed by the Defence Science and Technology Organisation (DSTO), enables Defence and industry to collaboratively explore emerging technology developments and assess their potential to enhance Australian Defence Force capability.

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Fast facts

  • CSIRO has been granted $2 million under the Defence Capability and Technology Demonstrator (CTD) Program to demonstrate the capabilities of carbon nanotubes as strong, lightweight antiballistic materials
  • CSIRO’s Carbon Nanotubes for Ballistic Protection project was one of eight selected as part of the latest round of Defence CTD Program funding

Contact Information

Primary Contact

Dr Stephen Hawkins
Senior Research Scientist
Materials Science and Engineering
Phone: 61 3 9545 2397 
Fax: 61 3 9545 2363 

media Contact

Ms Heather Forward (MBIT)
Communications Officer, Geelong
Materials Science and Engineering
Phone: 61 3 5246 4085 
Fax: 61 3 5246 4811