Gratomic Inc. (“
Gratomic” or the
“
Company”) (TSX-V:GRAT)
(FRANKFURT:CB81)
(WKN:A2JAP3) is pleased to
announce that Gratomic and Perpetuus Carbon Technologies Ltd.
(“
Perpetuus”), have agreed to enter into
negotiations to form a Joint Venture Agreement to build on
Perpetuus’ capability (currently (2018) to initially provide 500
tonnes of surfaced modified graphenes per annum) to the tire
manufacturing industry.
Gratomic Executive Chairman and CO-CEO Sheldon Inwentash stated,
“Junior graphite Miners and the graphene industry as a whole have
spent the last ten years seeking to identify the "Killer App” for
graphenes. We are therefore very pleased to announce that based on
the technical information derived from laboratory and “real world
“testing received from our LOI partner Perpetuus. We are mutually
confident of our success in identifying an application that will
prove an industry game changer whereby graphite derived graphenes
will be produced in industrial quantities to satisfy the needs of a
market sector that will consume 1000’s of tonnes of engineered for
purpose graphenes to meet the projected market demand.
Consequently, both Gratomic and Perpetuus have now agreed to enter
into substantial negotiations for a joint venture to address end
user tire manufacturing needs. This has been a long and intensive
development and testing process and we are now excited to move
towards negotiating a Joint Venture and begin commercial production
in 2018.
Gratomic is pleased to provide the following
summary findings facilitated by Perpetuus in the context of the
“Production of Graphene Nano Platelets (“GNP’s”)
(sometimes referred to as multilayer graphene’s or graphene flakes)
from Mined Bulk Graphite provided by Gratomic Inc.
Background
Gratomic engaged Perpetuus Carbon Ltd in a development programme
for the purpose of:
- Completing a study that would determine the optimum method to
produce GNP’s from mined graphite provided by Gratomic Inc.
- Employing the GNP’s derived from the graphite as a material
enhancing component for mass-market commercial
exploitation.
Gratomic executed a Letter of intent (‘LOI’) with Perpetuus
Carbon Technologies Ltd in August 2017. The specific purpose of the
LOI was to produce viable GNP enhanced tires, establishing that
Aukam Graphite derived GNP’s were suitable for the tire industry
and can be produced by liberating surface modified flakes of
nano-graphite, via the PCT patented plasma processing
technology.
Graphene is a two-dimensional carbon allotrope, arranged in a
hexagonal crystal lattice structure currently produced in “islands”
of graphenes with the lateral dimensions typically measured in
millimeters. When properly dispersed a thickness of one or two or
three atoms can be achieved.
The majority of GNP’s employed to develop mass-market
applications is produced in universities and institutional labs, a
few grams at a time, often at a cost greater than purchasing
platinum.
Graphene is currently manufactured by two methods
- “Top down” where the Graphene lattice is
liberated from its host, graphite
http://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/20344975-7f61-4791-95c6-f14772d774e7
- “Bottom up” where the Graphene lattice is
grown atom by atom.
http://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/07b5e060-a8bd-4013-afd3-3db526614782
To identify a solution in the respect of industrial scale
production of graphite derived functionalised GNP’s for mass-market
consumption from its Aukam graphite mine feedstock. Gratomic have
undertaken a discovery programme in collaboration with Perpetuus
Carbon Technologies (Perpetuus) to identify the best method
available to meet the needs of the mass market.
Perpetuus are the beneficial owners of a patented technology and
probably the only company globally that can deliver by an
environmentally friendly method of graphite to graphenes suitably
nano engineered for the mass market.
Perpetuus are also currently equipped to produce 100’s of tonnes
per annum with the ability to scale up to the 1000’s of tonnes per
annum that will be demanded by the tire manufacturing industry.
Currently there are potentially scalable and low-cost methods
available to mass-produce “top down” graphite to graphene flakes
for applications such as nano reinforcements for composites;
polymer based conductive inks, energy storage and coatings.
However, it is crucial that graphenes produced on an industrial
scale must outperform, existing options such as carbon black and
activated carbon. Also, to motivate industries to adopt the new
materials use in the targeted applications it must also be cost
effective.
Perpetuus have established that its patented plasma-based
technology can cost effectively transform the friable crystalline
Aukam graphite. Because of its friability the Aukam graphite more
easily processes in to high quality GNP’s that can be produced on
an industrial scale. It has also been established that the outputs
when suitably surface modified and suitably formulated within a
tire elastomeric matrix will deliver significant benefits to its
initial target market.
The current status of the Gratomic and PCT collaborative venture
is:
- The GNP’s produced were surface modified specifically to be
included within hybrid elastomeric tire formulations.
- The graphite to GNP enhanced hybrid formulations were employed
in bicycle and passenger vehicle treads.
- When tested in the respect of laboratory static and dynamic
testing the graphene enhanced compound results indicated that the
treads were superior to current tread formulations.
- When the treads were road tested the results concluded that
when compared to a globally recognised high performance tire the
graphene enhanced tread would deliver an approx. lifetime increase
of 5000 kilometers.
Overview: - Gratomic Graphite Derived GNP
Enhanced Tire Components
A tire is a complex composite device. There are many ways in
which it is possible to improve a single aspect of its performance
such as improving rolling resistance by changing the dimensions of
the tire. However, “give and take” variations in compound
formulations are inevitably detrimental to other performance
parameters. In this sense the advancement of tire science and
technology involves a constant compromise between compatible yet
mutually exclusive performance demands.
As a whole, a typical tire is a composite of several parts:
primarily sidewalls, inner liner and the tire tread - which itself
is a rubber component comprising a steel chord and textile
reinforced rubber network. If one considers that the tire tread is
the only part of the vehicle’s contact with the road, it becomes
obviously evident that all sources of energy dissipation are
facilitated by the tread material which is the prime influence on
total performance such as handling fuel efficiency and braking
efficiency. Adding Gratomic derived GNP’s changes the shape of the
rheology curve, which influences the cure chemistry and results in
changes to the rubber compound.
Proven studies establish:
- The use of GNP’s in inner liner compounds will reduce air
permeability.
- Perpetuus are working with cycle and passenger tire
manufacturers using thin layers of graphene for the same
purpose.
- The same characteristics have established that varied
graphene formulations can be extended to passenger and light truck
tire manufacturing.
- GNP’s equals a lighter tire.
- GNP’s equals lower rolling resistance, high impact and tensile
properties
- GNP’s therefore offers the potential for improved economy and
superior performance
Gratomic wish to consider the practicalities of GNP production
in order to exploit bulk applications where large scale and
low-cost production is critical.
There are numerous ways to produce graphene from graphite.
Commercial industrial scale mass production
Options.
Scalable methods of industrial graphene production currently
being practiced and further explored are graphite oxide,
liquid-phase exfoliation and electrochemical methodologies. The
following provides a perspective on these routes in the context of
industrial scale production. The main concerns regarding current
methods is
- Quality or crystalinity of the graphene sheet produced
- Scalability (1000’s of tonnes per annum)
- Managing post production toxic waste
- Controlled nano engineering of the graphene outputs to enable
comprehensive exploitation of the graphene applications.
The most popular and widely exploited current method being
explored by the majority of aspirational industrial scale producers
to provide commercial quantities of graphene “top down” graphene is
based on a scale up of early laboratory methods. The chosen system
being Redox, (via the Hummers method or modified Hummers method).
Generating graphite oxide (GO) through the chemical reaction of
natural mined graphite. This method is the primary method
GO is produced from mined refined graphite where the precious
graphene layers are stacked and bonded together within the
graphite. To exploit graphene commercially via the Hummers method
the graphene must be liberated from the purified graphite ore.
The vast majority of graphene producers attack the graphite ore
with strong oxidising agents that penetrate oxygen in between the
layers of graphene (intercalation). There are three phases to the
process:
- The initial phase is to convert graphite to a sulphuric
acid graphite intercalation compound.
- The secondary phase is conversion of the graphite intercalation
compound. In to an oxidized form of graphite known as graphite
oxide
- The third phase is converting graphite oxide into graphene
oxide by adding reducing agents, this partially reduces the
oxygen-containing groups on the surface forming a graphene that
still when analysed reveals less oxygen content.
Originally the Hummers method employed a combination of sodium
nitrate, potassium permanganate and sulphuric acid. There are
variations and modifications of the original Hummers method such as
excluding the use of sodium nitrate, to reduce or prevent the
production of toxic nitrous gas and other toxic byproducts that are
typical of wet chemistry methods to produce graphene flakes.
Another variation is to use phosphoric acid to increase the
productivity of GO with elevated oxidation levels.
The primary focus in this area however has been to achieve an
environmentally friendly safer scalable method whereas expanded
graphite rather than graphite ore is employed as the primary feed
stock unfortunately when potassium permanganate reacts with
sulphuric acid the oxidizing species generates a dimanganese
heptoxide. Most troubling is dimanganese heptoxide will
explode at temperatures around 500C when it interacts with organic
compounds. The control of heat generated in such a high-risk
reaction on a large industrial scale process provides significant
challenges.
Other issues that relate to Hummers and modified Hummers methods
include
- Batch-to-batch reproducibility
- Hole defects in the graphene sheets during oxidation
which prejudice conductivity
- The washing steps to clean the material after synthesis can
detrimentally effect graphene properties and provide a troublesome
post production waste
- The carboxylic acid groups created on the graphene edges are
particularly challenging to reduce.
- Mildly oxidized large GO flakes are producible but at
significantly reduced productivity level and the effective
dispersibility in water is significantly reduced.
In an industrial scale operation, the product of this process is
most likely to be multi-layer graphene or nano graphite, rather
than graphene. Consequently, it is often the case that consistency
of the quality cannot be guaranteed. In fact, the vast majority of
“graphene” in the market is actually graphene oxide. This method
finds challenges in precision, unpredictable quality, performance
and high production cost. The process is also slow but can be
accelerated by introducing elevated temperatures by many means
including atmospheric plasma microwaves. The outputs without
further refinement will have limited commercial applications.
An electrochemical option offers another popular alternative
process.
Two graphite electrodes are immersed in an electrolyte. By
applying a potential between the electrodes, the cathode graphite
component is eroded away, and the electrolyte is loaded with layers
of nano graphite’s. The suspension of graphite particles is dried
and then heated at an elevated temperature or it can be thermally
shocked with atmospheric plasma microwaves providing graphene nano
platelets.
Carbon and graphite electrodes are conventionally employed in
electrochemistry. The availability of large-scale industrial
electrolyzers as a platform for scaling up electrochemical
reactions is currently un proven. Recently an Australian junior
graphite mining company have explored this route to produce
graphene materials. The electrochemical route exploits
intercalation of ions and electrochemical initiated reactions with
the electrolyte for the exfoliation mechanism. Contingent on the
method and variations on electrochemistry the process could be
applied to facilitate functionalisation and exfoliation of graphite
electrodes controlled by applied voltage and the chosen electrolyte
typically, sulphuric acid, ionic liquids, lithium perchlorate in
propylene carbonate, aqueous inorganic salt solutions.
Diverse types of graphenes could be produced. Academic and
institutional research has demonstrated that applying non-oxidative
cathodic bias to the graphite electrode followed by in situ
electrochemical functionalization, electrochemically functionalized
graphene has been obtained that could be transformed providing
pristine graphene.
The major limitation on the electrochemical route for mass
production is the method employed by junior graphite miners
involves the use of “lumps” of mined graphite ore suspended in an
electrolyte. For the process to be viable an unbroken voltage bias
to the graphite flakes is required. The methods employed on the lab
bench that have indicated some promise employed a single,
continuous graphite electrode in the form of a graphite rod, foil
or highly oriented pyrolytic graphite blocks.
It is problematic to note that although such work is relevant to
the use of graphenes for commercial applications the work to date
has not delivered stand out examples of project deliverables that
are currently being exploited on a commercial scale. It is also
problematic that some if not most of the graphene employed in the
experiments employ top down production methods that if
commercialised will offer serious concerns in the respect that if
they ever could be produced in industrial quantities the production
methods would yield unmanageable quantities of postproduction toxic
residues.
Graphene Oxide production being a typical example. Graphene
Oxide (GO), Monolayer & bi-layer graphene produced via
environmentally friendly cost-effective methods on an industrial
scale is currently science fiction. The same applies to the
electrochemical option. There are no producers that can produce
tonnes let alone the 100s or 1000s of tonnes of a consistent
quality product currently meeting these elevated expectations.
Because few if any producers of graphene who boast an industrial
scale capacity have been challenged to manipulate package and
transport graphenes in bulk quantities to a market that could
consume 10,000s of tonnes. The manipulation and handling of
Graphene has not been carefully considered due to its weightless
nature. Single layer graphenes are invisible to the naked eye and
will disappear into the atmosphere due to miniscule convection and
air movements these factors also currently restrain the
manufacturing of graphene on an industrial scale.
Hence, there is a need to seek a fundamental change in
the oxidative exfoliation mechanism and the “Holy Grail”, in the
graphite oxide route is to develop a novel controlled oxidation
mechanism in which the specificity and density of the oxygen-
containing functional groups could be well controlled.
Regulatory compliance in the respect of life cycle analysis and
environmental impact studies are all but almost completely ignored.
Due to graphenes varied range of properties, product Innovations as
well as new application discoveries are being explored by major
manufacturers on a laboratory R&D scale in respect of energy,
aerospace, biomedical & life sciences, electronics, defense and
others such as sensors, catalyst, coating, filtration and adhesive
electronic. However, lack of mass production, high prices and other
key factors are restraining the growth of the global graphene
market.
- Friable Graphenes are graphenes with the bonds broken.
http://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/942ab4c1-4ecf-4f7a-81f1-bee9ace16f4d
Private sector investments are abundant in junior graphite
miners and other optimistic hyped graphene players that are funded
also by public funds and shareholder funds with few if any
demonstrating the ability to capture and support a mass-market
application.
In Summary
Gratomic Inc. and Perpetuus Carbon Technologies Ltd have agreed
to enter into negotiations to form a Joint Venture Agreement to
build on Perpetuus’s capability (currently (2018) to provide 500
tonnes of surfaced modified graphenes per annum) to the tire
manufacturing industry. Once the market has been established,
Perpetuus have the capability to elevate capacity to 1000’s of
tonnes per annum of graphite derived surface modified GNP’s.
Perpetuus have reasonable expectations that the first commercially
available tires will be launched into the market in 2018.
Ian Walters Director
Perpetuus Advanced Materials |
Note: This report is prepared solely for the directors of
Gratomic Inc. Whilst, Perpetuus accept it will be viewed by third
parties, those parties, cannot rely on information contained,
whatsoever, in making investment decisions in Gratomic
About Gratomic Inc.
Gratomic Inc. is an advanced materials company
focused on a vertically integrated “mine to market”
commercialization of graphite products. Most notably the Gratomic
focus is founded on high value graphene-based application
components for a range of mass market products.
Sheldon Inwentash, Executive Chairman and
Co-CEO
For more information: visit the website at
www.ckr-carbon.com or contact:
Arno Brand, Co-CEO +1 416-561-4095
abrand@gratomic.ca
“Neither TSX Venture Exchange nor its Regulation
Services Provider (as that term is defined in the policies of the
TSX Venture Exchange) accepts responsibility for the adequacy or
accuracy of this release.”
FORWARD LOOKING STATEMENTS: This news release
contains forward-looking statements, which relate to future events
or future performance and reflect management’s current expectations
and assumptions. Such forward-looking statements reflect
management’s current beliefs and are based on assumptions made by
and information currently available to the Company. Investors are
cautioned that these forward-looking statements are neither
promises nor guarantees and are subject to risks and uncertainties
that may cause future results to differ materially from those
expected. These forward-looking statements are made as of the date
hereof and, except as required under applicable securities
legislation, the Company does not assume any obligation to update
or revise them to reflect new events or circumstances. All of the
forward-looking statements made in this press release are qualified
by these cautionary statements and by those made in our filings
with SEDAR in Canada (available at www.sedar.com).
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