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Look, no glass! All-PP fabric composites come to U.S.


* Self-reinforcing thermoplastic A polymer material that turns to liquid when heated and becomes solid when cooled. There are more than 40 types of thermoplastics, including acrylic, polypropylene, polycarbonate and polyethylene.  composites made by consolidating woven fabrics of oriented polypropylene tape are already commercial in Europe. Now there are two U.S. sources of these all-PP composites. This month, Milliken & Co., Spartanburg, S.C., is introducing Moldable Fabric Technology (MFT (1) (Master File Table) A list of files in an NTFS volume. It contains the name, size, time and date, etc. for each file. See NTFS and FAT.

(2) (Managed File T
) based on the PURE technology from Lankhorst Indutech bv of the Netherlands. Lankorst patented coextrusion of flat tapes of homopolymer PP sandwiched between PP copolymer copolymer: see polymer.  skins. The tapes are unidirectionally oriented by cold drawing, which increases strength and stiffness. Milliken weaves the tapes into fabrics and also supplies consolidated sheets made by hot pressing multiple layers of fabric.

Since late 2002, a similar product called Curv, has been produced commercially in Gronau, Germany, by Amoco Fabrics and Fibers Co., a unit of BP Amoco. Last month, that unit was spun off and renamed Propex Fabrics Inc. Propex offers Curv for sale in the U.S., but production and technical service are still located in Germany. Propex supplies consolidated sheet of 0.3 to 3 mm pressed from two to 20 layers of fabric.

Processing and handling these all-PP composites avoids the abrasion abrasion /abra·sion/ (ah-bra´zhun)
1. a rubbing or scraping off through unusual or abnormal action; see also planing.

2. a rubbed or scraped area on skin or mucous membrane.
 and skin-irritation potential of glass fiber. MFT and Curv fabrics and sheets can be molded into finished parts using moderate heat and pressure. In the case of MFT, the copolymer skins of the woven tapes melt to consolidate the fabric at a temperature low enough to prevent annealing annealing (ənēl`ĭng), process in which glass, metals, and other materials are treated to render them less brittle and more workable.  the homopolymer tape core, thus preserving its oriented properties. This bimaterial structure provides a processing window of 10[degrees] to 15[degrees] C for consolidating the fabrics into sheets. However, the sheets can be post-formed at temperatures of 140 to 160 C (284 to 320 F).

Curv is based on highly drawn monolayer mon·o·lay·er
n.
1. A film or layer one molecule thick formed at the interface between water and either oil or air by a substance such as a partially esterified fatty acid that contains both hydrophobic and hydrophilic groups in the same
 tapes of homopolymer PP. During sheet consolidation, Curv requires careful process control to melt only a thin outer layer of the tapes while preserving orientation throughout 80% of their thickness. Michel Jansen, manager of new business development in Europe, says the process window is only 1[degrees] to 2[degrees] C for Propex to consolidate Curv fabrics, but the sheets can be formed by customers over a range of 20[degrees] C because the remelted skins of the tapes have a lower softening temperature.

Molding MFT and Curv requires matched tools, or one mold plus a rubber plug or bladder, and moderate pressure of 45 to 300 psi. Ahold/slip frame allows the material to slip into or over the mold, instead of flowing as a melt.

Outstanding properties

Milliken says MFT is 30% to 60% lighter, at the same stiffness, than PP, HDPE HDPE
abbr.
high-density polyethylene
, ABS, PP/glass-mat composites, steel, and aluminum. MFT reportedly also provides two to 15 times higher impact strength than typical TP composites, even at temperatures down to -40 C. Propex indicates that toughness of Curv increases at low temperatures (see table) where normal PP becomes brittle.

The first European applications for Lankhorst's PURE material are safety helmets and inner door panels for Mercedes-Benz and Volkswagen panel trucks. The first commercial uses for Curv include Nike protective kneepads, kitebeards, speaker cones, and race-car spoiler spoiler: see airplane.

1. spoiler - A remark which reveals important plot elements from books or movies, thus denying the reader (of the article) the proper suspense when reading the book or watching the movie.
2.
 lips. Several automotive applications of Curv, including underfloors, are said to be approved for 2007 vehicles. Milliken and Propex say the first applications for MFT and Curv in the U.S. will be truck trailers and water-sports equipment. Potential uses include architectural panels (Curv or MTP (1) (Message Transfer Part) See SS7.

(2) (Media Transfer Protocol) A Microsoft enhancement to the picture transfer protocol (PTP), starting with Windows Media Player 10 in Windows XP.
 skins bonded to cores of EPP (1) (Enhanced Parallel Port) See IEEE 1284.

(2) (Ethernet Packet Processor) A chip from Kalpana, Inc., Santa Clara, CA that doubles speed of Ethernet transmission to 20Mbits/sec. In 1994, Kalpana was acquired by Cisco.
 foam or PP honeycomb honeycomb

a mosaic of closely packed units with depressed centers giving a honeycomb appearance.


honeycomb ringworm
see favus.

honeycomb stomach
reticulum.
), kayaks, canoes, personal watercraft personal watercraft
n.
1. A motorized recreational water vehicle normally ridden by straddling a seat.

2. (used with a pl. verb) Such water vehicles considered as a group.
, snowmobiles, car-top carriers, paddles, ballistic protection, luggage, and piping.
CONSOLIDATED MOLDABLE PP FABRICS
(Representative Properties--Can Be Tailored)

Material                             MFT       Curv

Tensile Modulus, kpsi                725-870   609-725

Tensile Strength, kpsi               29.7      17.4-26.1

Ultimate Elongation, %               6         16.6

Flexural Modulus, kpsi               725-870   507.5

Flexural Strength, kpsi              9.4       11.6-15.6

HDT, F @ 264 psi                     230       216

Notched Izod, ft-lb/in.
 68 F                                90        89
-40 F                                --        140

Gardner Impact, ft-lb
 68 F                                33.3      --
-40 F                                33.6      --

CTE, [10.sup.-6] in./in.[degrees]F   0.6       0.4


NEED TO KNOW MORE?

Propex Fabrics Inc., Austell, Ga.

(770) 941-1711 * PT Direct: 437XP

Milliken & Co., New Ventures Business, Spartanburg, S.C.

(800) 845-2050 * PT Direct: 822PX

LEARN MORE online

Visit www.ptonline.com/articles/200501cu3.htm for a link to this related article:

* Self-Reinforced PP Composite Shows Promise in Automotive, Jan. 2002
COPYRIGHT 2005 Gardner Publications, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2005, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Article Details
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Title Annotation:Composites
Author:Schut, Jan H.
Publication:Plastics Technology
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Jan 1, 2005
Words:716
Previous Article:Engineering thermoplastic processes like a thermoset.(Materials)
Next Article:Colorant makers expand services to speed customers' product development.(Additives)
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