Technical comparison of glass fiber and carbon fiber reinforced nylon — strength, stiffness, thermal, cost, and application guidance.

Why Reinforce Nylon? The Performance Gap

Unfilled nylon is an excellent general-purpose engineering plastic, but its modulus (2.8-3.0 GPa) and thermal resistance (HDT 65°C at 1.82 MPa) fall short for structural and high-temperature applications. Reinforcement fillers — glass fiber and carbon fiber — close this gap dramatically.
The choice between glass fiber and carbon fiber reinforcement is one of the most consequential material decisions in precision engineering. It determines stiffness, strength, dimensional stability, weight, cost, and processing characteristics. This guide provides the complete comparison engineers need.
Material Composition and Cost Comparison
| Unfilled PA66 | None | 82 MPa | 3.0 GPa | 28 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| PA66-GF30 | 30% Glass Fiber | 185 MPa | 10.0 GPa | 76 |
| PA66-CF30 | 30% Carbon Fiber | 220 MPa | 17.0 GPa | 118 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| PA6-CF30 | 30% Carbon Fiber | 200 MPa | 15.5 GPa | 108 |
*Specific Strength = Strength-to-weight ratio (MPa / g/cm³)
**Cost Analysis** (approximate, USD/kg):
| Matériau | Price Range | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Unfilled PA66 | $3-5 | Baseline |
| PA6-GF30 | $4-7 | ~40% premium |
| PA66-GF30 | $4.5-8 | Most common reinforced nylon |
| PA6-CF30 | $18-30 | Carbon fiber premium |
|---|---|---|
| Aluminum 6061 | $5-8 | Metal comparison |
**Key insight**: Carbon fiber nylon costs 4-7× more than glass fiber nylon but provides only 20-30% higher strength and 50-70% higher stiffness. The premium is justified primarily when weight reduction, ESD properties, or reduced warpage are critical requirements.
Mechanical Properties: Strength, Stiffness, and Toughness
**Strength and Stiffness**:
Carbon fiber reinforced nylon outperforms glass fiber in every mechanical property, but the margin varies:
– **Tensile strength**: CF30 is 20-30% stronger than GF30
– **Tensile modulus (stiffness)**: CF30 is 55-70% stiffer than GF30
– **Flexural strength**: CF30 is 15-25% higher than GF30
– **Flexural modulus**: CF30 is 50-65% higher than GF30
The stiffness advantage is particularly significant — CF30 reaches 17 GPa, approaching aluminum (69 GPa), while GF30 maxes out at 10 GPa. For stiffness-critical applications requiring metal replacement, CF30 may be the only viable plastic option.
**Impact and Toughness**:
Both reinforced materials have lower impact resistance than unfilled nylon (fiber reinforcement reduces ductility):
| Notched Izod (J/m) | 45 | 105 | 70 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Allongement à la rupture (%) | 60 | 3 | 2 |
GF30 maintains better impact resistance than CF30 because glass fiber absorbs more impact energy through debonding. CF30 is stiffer but more brittle.
Dimensional Stability and Warpage Control
This is where carbon fiber shows its most decisive advantage.
**Thermal Expansion**:
| Matériau | Thermal Expansion (×10⁻⁵/°C) | vs. Aluminum |
|---|---|---|
| Unfilled PA66 | 8-9 | 4-5× higher |
| PA66-GF30 | 2-3 | 1-1.5× |
|---|---|---|
| Aluminum 6061 | 2.3 | Baseline |
CF30’s thermal expansion coefficient approaches that of aluminum and steel. This means parts made from CF30 change dimensions less with temperature variation — critical for precision components and assemblies with metal inserts.
**Warpage and Shrinkage Anisotropy**:
Glass fiber causes differential shrinkage: parts shrink less in the flow direction (where fibers are oriented) than perpendicular to flow. This creates warpage, especially in flat parts with uneven cooling or asymmetrical gating.
Carbon fiber causes less anisotropy because carbon fibers are smaller and more uniformly dispersible. CF30 parts show 40-60% less warpage than equivalent GF30 parts.
**For flat panels, large structural components, and precision-machined parts**: CF30 is significantly easier to mold to tolerance without post-machining.
Electrical and Special Properties
**Electrical Conductivity / ESD**:
This is the unique advantage of carbon fiber reinforcement:
| Résistivité volumique | 10^15 Ω·cm | 10^14 Ω·cm | 10^2-10^4 Ω·cm |
|---|---|---|---|
| ESD Category | Insulator | Insulator | Static Dissipative |
Carbon fiber at 30% loading creates a conductive network within the nylon matrix. Parts become static-dissipative (SDS, 10^5-10^11 Ω), eliminating static electricity buildup that attracts dust, damages electronics, or causes sparks in flammable environments.
**ESD Applications for CF Nylon**:
– Electronics component trays and carriers
– Fuel system components (prevents static spark ignition)
– Cleanroom equipment (prevents contamination from static attraction)
– Conveyor guides and rollers in printing/packaging
**nylonplastic.com’s CF Nylon** (PA6-CF and PA12-CF) is specifically formulated for ESD applications, with consistent resistivity across the part surface and after moisture conditioning.
Processing and Application Recommendations
**Injection Molding Guidelines**:
| Parameter | PA66-GF30 | PA66-CF30 |
|---|---|---|
| Melt Temperature (°C) | 275-295 | 270-290 |
| Mold Temperature (°C) | 80-100 | 80-100 |
| Injection Pressure | Haut | Haut |
| Back Pressure | Moderate | Moderate |
| Screw Compression Ratio | 2.0-2.5 | 1.8-2.2 |
|---|---|---|
| Gate Size | Larger than unfilled | Larger than GF |
**Machining**:
CF30 is significantly harder to machine than GF30 — carbide or diamond tooling required. Glass fiber is abrasive but manageable with solid carbide. Carbon fiber tends to delaminate and fray at machined edges.
**Design Recommendations by Application**:
**Choose GF30 when:**
– Budget is constrained
– Standard structural stiffness is sufficient (10 GPa)
– Impact resistance is important
– Large-part injection molding with complex geometry
**Choose CF30 when:**
– Metal-replacement stiffness is required (17 GPa approaches aluminum)
– Dimensional stability across temperature is critical
– ESD/conductivity is required
– Weight reduction is a priority (CF is 30% lighter than glass fiber at equal stiffness)
– Low warpage in large flat parts
FAQ

How do you know whether Glass Fiber vs. Carbon Fiber Reinforced Nylon: Performance Guide fits a part?
Glass Fiber vs. Carbon Fiber Reinforced Nylon: Performance Guide fits a part when its load capacity, temperature range, moisture exposure, wear behavior, and processing method match the real service conditions.
What properties should be checked for Glass Fiber vs. Carbon Fiber Reinforced Nylon: Performance Guide?
Vérifier la résistance, la rigidité, la résistance aux chocs, la résistance à la chaleur, l'absorption d'humidité, la stabilité dimensionnelle, le frottement, l'usure et la compatibilité chimique.
What is the biggest selection risk for Glass Fiber vs. Carbon Fiber Reinforced Nylon: Performance Guide?
Le plus grand risque est de choisir à partir d'une fiche technique sans tenir compte de l'environnement réel, de la méthode de traitement, de la géométrie de la pièce et de l'utilisation à long terme.
When should Glass Fiber vs. Carbon Fiber Reinforced Nylon: Performance Guide be tested before production?
Les essais sont recommandés lorsque la pièce est soumise à une charge, à la chaleur, à des produits chimiques, à l'humidité, à des tolérances serrées, à des exigences réglementaires ou à un nouvel environnement de travail.


