I suspect you are wrong - if what EDE claim on slide 21 of the preso is correct.
The problem with reinforced plastics has been stiffness. Carbon fibre reinforcement has overcome this to a large extent. But what EDE are claiming sounds like the CNT is making plastics behave more like a metal than a traditional plastic, with extra stiffness, but more importantly ductility. You can't have ductility with strong fibres. Ductility in metals is achieved by crystal dislocations. Fibres cannot dislocate. I can see how CNT can cause slippage rather than breakage.
If the implications in that slide are correct, then "EdenPlast" could be almost infinitely more significant than EdenCrete. A material with the density and corrosion resistance of plastic and the physical properties of a metal? Who needs Scandium?
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