Young Innovators Propel China's Carbon Fiber Revolution
Young innovators at Jilin Carbon Valley are driving breakthroughs in China's carbon fiber production, achieving large-scale manufacturing of 35K carbon fiber for wind turbine blades, marking a significant technological advancement.
Par Liu Yiqing, People's Daily
Inside the production workshops of Jilin Carbon Valley Carbon Fiber Co., Ltd. (Carbon Valley), a subsidiary of Jilin Chemical Fiber Group (JLFiber) in northeast China's Jilin province, silver strands of carbon fiber precursor race through roaring production lines.
Through processes including pre-washing, humidification, oxidation, low-temperature carbonization, and winding, the material transforms into carbon fiber.
"The carbon fiber filament is even thinner than a human hair," said Chen Hao, deputy director of the company's high-performance workshop. "Its density is less than a quarter that of steel, yet its strength can reach seven to nine times higher."
In 2025, a major research project jointly developed by JLFiber, Donghua University, and eight other universities, research institutes, and industry-leading enterprises passed technical appraisal. The project, titled Key Technologies for the Large-Scale Manufacturing of Large-Tow Carbon Fiber and Composite Materials and the Industrialization of Large Wind Turbine Blades, marked a key breakthrough in the application of 35K large-tow carbon fiber composites in offshore wind turbine blades.
But what defines "35K" carbon fiber?
The "K" unit measures carbon fiber tows, with 1K representing 1,000 filaments. A 35K tow therefore consists of 35,000 ultra-fine filaments requiring exceptional consistency.
"Human hair varies in thickness," remarked Yu Jian, a manager in the company's quality management department. "To ensure performance, the length, thickness, and other indicators of all 35,000 filaments must remain highly uniform."
For years, the large-tow carbon fiber market was dominated by foreign companies due to the complexity of production processes and proprietary formulas.
In 2016, seeking cost reduction and competitive enhancement, Carbon Valley formed a young R&D team dedicated to innovation. Through rigorous experimentation, they identified 35K carbon fiber as optimal for balancing performance, production efficiency, and cost.
General manager Chen Haijun explained how the team overcame technological bottlenecks through process upgrades and equipment innovation. The company coordinated with supply chain partners and conducted eight specialized technical seminars.
Team members immersed themselves in laboratory work, repeatedly testing and optimizing spare-part materials, process parameters, and channel structures step by step. With each seminar, multiple production indicators for the 35K carbon fiber improved further.
After more than half a year of intensive work, the team successfully produced 35K carbon fiber in 2017 that fully met standards for hardness, strength, and other mechanical properties.
Compared with traditional metal materials, carbon fiber offers clear advantages including high strength, low weight, and strong plasticity. But manufacturing carbon fiber is costly and resource-intensive: producing a ton of finished carbon fiber requires roughly two tons of precursor material. Any production error can therefore result in substantial losses.
To compete in the market, large-scale production and cost-effectiveness became essential.
Although the core research and development work had been largely completed, new problems emerged during mass production.
Unlike laboratory experiments, industrial production requires continuous manufacturing of 100,000-meter-long 35K carbon fiber tows, which must then be wound into cylindrical rolls for transportation and sale. The longer the tow became, the greater the risk of problems such as insufficient strength or broken filaments.
To tackle these issues, Shan Xin, deputy director of the spinning workshop, led his team in upgrading production-line equipment.
The team redesigned transmission roller connections from single-sided support to double-sided support, while continuously testing new materials to improve equipment durability and transmission stability. These changes reduced friction-related filament breakage.
At the same time, the team implemented systematic clean-production upgrades. Starting from the polymerization stage at the source of production, the team introduced layer-by-layer cleaning and filtration processes throughout the entire system and production flow to minimize impurities and improve the stability of the 35K carbon fiber.
"When early testing showed the performance didn't meet standards, I was anxious," Yu recalled, having witnessed the development of 35K carbon fiber from scratch. "But nobody gave up. Everyone kept searching for solutions."
Today, pass rates for key indicators such as strength, modulus, and fineness continue to rise steadily. "We are confident enough to stand up to microscopic-level checks," Yu said.
As evening fell, batches of newly packaged 35K carbon fiber precursor left Carbon Valley and were shipped to downstream carbonization and composite-material manufacturers. After further processing, these lightweight yet highly durable materials became carbon plates used in the main beams of wind turbine blades.
Carbon Valley has now signed long-term supply agreements with multiple major domestic wind turbine manufacturers in partnership with downstream enterprises. Chinese-made 35K carbon fiber is now being applied on a large scale at wind farms across the country.