Happy campers

Researchers in the US have created a material for the US military that is lighter, stronger and less expensive than traditional materials used to build temporary tent structures.

When it comes to quickly setting up temporary buildings, the US military relies on  large-area shelters, which are used for command-and-control centres, maintenance hangars and mess halls.

Researchers at North Carolina State University’s College of Textiles have created a new fabric for these structures that is significantly lighter, stronger and less expensive than traditional materials. The research is sponsored by a $360,000 grant partially funded by the US Air Force.

According to Dr. Behnam Pourdeyhimi, associate dean for industry research and extension, William A. Klopman Distinguished Professor and director of the Nonwovens Co-operative Research Center, current large-area tents used by the military are made of woven polyester saturated with an impermeable rubberised coating to provide protection from fire, UV radiation and moisture. And with a weight of more than 20 ounces per square yard, they are quite heavy.

This Large Area Maintenance Shelter is called a clam shell due to the way the doors open and close

The project’s goal is a fabric that offers a weight reduction of 10 to 20 percent. Pourdeyhimi and his colleagues have far exceeded that goal. “We had a fabric we had made that was quite strong, but we didn’t know how far we could push it. We asked ourselves if we could take some of our existing knowledge and really push it to meet the requirements of this project,” Pourdeyhimi said.

“We created a five ounce fabric that almost meets the strength requirements. Using two layers of that fabric we’ll probably meet the properties of the 20 ounce fabric, but with only half the weight. This can be very significant, a major breakthrough,” he said.

Pourdeyhimi says the key to the project is the composition of the nonwoven fibres. “Our fibre is a composite fibre of polyethylene, which has many tiny nylon fibres – called fibrils– within it. We like to call this fabric ‘composite islands in the sea.’ When you pull on the fabric, the stress is transferred via the weaker surrounding matrix to these tiny high-strength fibrils. These fibrils are only one micron, or one millionth of a metre, across,” he said. After the fibres are created they are fused together with heat and high-pressure water jets.

Pourdeyhimi said the next step in the project is to laminate these two layers of fabric together and then have a textile partner apply an emulsion, or coating, to make the material impermeable. “We’ve made a really good fabric, now we have to make that into a really good tent fabric.

“The fabric is fairly stiff, which is fine for a tent, but when you dye it, it becomes even softer. Now we’re thinking that this could be used for other applications like outdoor fabrics such as awnings, or even apparel like hunting clothes and motorcycle jackets,” Pourdeyhimi said.

This new nonwoven material also meets or exceeds all the military’s physical property requirements for battle dress uniforms. “The military has even asked if we could create lightweight fabric ropes for soldiers. Based on the performance criteria, we think we can do that,” Pourdeyhimi said.

College of Textile researchers are now working to make this new material even lighter. “We’ll be trying out some high-performance nylon nonwoven material to see if we can achieve the same results with only a five ounce fabric. That would be a major breakthrough,” Pourdeyhimi said.

Pourdeyhimi said several member companies of the Nonwovens Co-operative Research Center have expressed interest in these fabrics.

“I haven’t seen fabrics like this in my 15-plus years working in nonwovens – low cost, high volume and high performance,” Pourdeyhimi said.