You might find interesting (and impress with your project) that some UK company, I think HexMC (I had attended the conference, if I find the info I will post it up) developed a few special forms of CFRP. Where they semi cure CFRP with certain special resins, chop it up into 'chips' and use this for special injection moulding to create a 'quasi-isotropic', and fluid-like properties. The purpose is to get closer to automated carbon fibre products.
However for some purposes, where you purely need properties of CFRP in one direction - manual specific lay-up is still better.
If I were you, I would first research composites in general, learn the basic ideas between particle / fibre composites / laminar composites
woven fibres, quasi-iso-directional fibres, etc.
fibre pull-out
energy absorption properties
Then start getting more specific
Glass Fibre Reinforced Plastic
Carbon Fibre Reinforced Plastic
Then look at more modern exotic forms of CFRP as the one I mentioned at the beginning.
And please, don't think like many 'boy racers' do - that CFRP is the best material for everything. It has its ideal uses and pointless uses.