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The Economic Times
The Economic Times
Trending Desk

China develops fibre that is 10 times stronger than steel, but thinner than hair, can pull coach carrying 54 adults

China has introduced a new ultra-high-strength carbon fiber material that is thinner than a human hair but far stronger than steel. The newly developed T1200-grade fiber, also known as SYT80, has already entered industrial-scale production, with Chinese officials claiming the material is powerful enough to pull a coach carrying 54 adults.

The breakthrough was announced by the China National Building Material Group (CNBM), a state-owned company, which said the country has become the first in the world to mass-produce this grade of carbon fiber at the hundred-ton level.

Thinner than hair, stronger than steel

The new fiber measures less than one-tenth the thickness of a strand of human hair. Despite its tiny size, its tensile strength reportedly exceeds 8 gigapascals (GPa), making it around ten times stronger than ordinary structural steel.

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At the same time, the material weighs far less than steel. According to CNBM, the density of the fiber is only about one-quarter that of conventional steel, giving it an unusual mix of strength and lightness.

Chinese researchers demonstrated the material’s strength by twisting around 120,000 microscopic filaments into a rope less than 2 millimetres wide. Chinese media reports claimed the rope was strong enough to pull a coach loaded with 54 adults.

China claims world-first industrial production

The carbon fiber was officially unveiled at the JEC World composite materials trade show held in Paris on March 11, 2026. CNBM’s subsidiary Zhongfu Shenying showcased the product and confirmed that factory-level production had already started.

Unlike many advanced materials that remain limited to laboratory experiments, the T1200-grade fiber has reportedly reached stable industrial manufacturing. CNBM said annual production capacity has already crossed the hundred-ton mark.

The company described the achievement as a major milestone for China’s advanced materials industry and claimed no other country has yet reached industrial-scale production at this strength level.

The development could place China ahead of Japanese giant Toray Industries, which previously announced progress on T1200 fiber technology but did not publicly reveal large-scale production figures.

Why the material matters

Carbon fiber grades are ranked according to strength levels, starting from lower categories such as T300 and moving upward through T700, T800, T1000 and T1100. T1200 now represents the highest commercially discussed strength tier.

The jump from one grade to another is considered significant in industries where even small improvements in weight and durability can transform performance.

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Because of its high strength and low weight, the new material is expected to be used in aerospace systems, hydrogen storage tanks, wind turbine blades, lightweight electric vehicles, humanoid robots and low-altitude aircraft technology.

Chinese officials said the material could support the next generation of high-end manufacturing and strategic industries.

Asia tightening grip on carbon fiber market

Industry reports released alongside the announcement suggest the global carbon fiber market is increasingly shifting toward Asia.

Japan’s Toray remains the world’s biggest producer, while companies in South Korea and other Asian countries are rapidly increasing output. Analysts say China’s entry into the top-performance carbon fiber category could further strengthen the region’s dominance in advanced manufacturing materials.

The latest market outlook also identified growing demand for recycled carbon fiber and lightweight industrial components as countries push for cleaner energy systems and more efficient transportation technologies.

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