McLaren has teamed up with the specialised company V Carbon to pioneer the use of recycled carbon on its MCL60.
The recycled material will first be used on the cockpit branding panels of the cars driven by Lando Norris and Oscar Piastri.
McLaren intends to keep the material on its cars for the remainder of the 2023 F1 season if the Austin trial is successful, with a view to exploring further use on its future cars.
Carbon fibre has been an integral part of F1 car design for decades thanks to its favourable strength-to-weight ratio.
It was McLaren that pioneered its use in 1981 with the John Barnard-designed MP4/1, the first F1 car to feature a full carbon composite monocoque. Carbon fibre-reinforced polymers have also become integral to the design of the latest airliners from Boeing and Airbus, among other technology applications.
But the use of carbon fibre also comes with environmental caveats as its demand is expected to double over the next 10 years, with studies estimating around 30% of carbon fibre ends up as waste during the production process.
By exploring the use of recycled carbon fibre McLaren hopes it has taken the first step towards to "developing a fully circular F1 car by 2030", a car which can be built from recycled materials.
Source: Autosport