巨大videos高潮,超级av在线天堂东京热,亚洲日产无码中文字幕,野花免费观看高清电视

Home About us News center Products Innovation Careers
industry news
company news
industry news
media focus
video
Magna to develop bioplastic for automotive interiors
 
  By Kerri Jansen
STAFF REPORTER
Published: February 13, 2014 3:01 pm ET
Updated: February 13, 2014 3:03 pm ET

Canadian automotive supplier Magna International Inc. is exploring potential automotive applications for a bioplastic made from byproducts of sugar production.

Magna, headquartered in Aurora, Ontario, has signed a cooperation agreement with Italian bioplastics company Bio-on srl to develop automotive-compatible products from Bio-on’s polyhydroxyalkanoate (PHA)-based bioplastic as an alternative to conventional plastics.

The project was launched in response to a call for sustainable solutions from Magna’s customer base, said Dieter Fahrländer, vice president of advanced engineering for Magna’s Interiors operating unit. Magna has worked with bioplastics in the past, but sought a solution that did not rely on a food source, he said.

“We searched for a long time for material that is in no way [bound] to the food chain,” Fahrländer said. “Because if you are talking about oil or corn or something like that, that is always really a setback to our customers, because they do not want to touch the food chain.”

Because Bio-on’s product is made from a waste material — the syrup left over when sugar beets are used to make commercial-grade sugar — it’s a more sustainable solution, Fahrländer said.

“In this case we are operating within the waste of the sugar production, which is also available in a really high yearly tonnage, so on the one side we have enough of it… and on the other side we found now one solution that does not affect the food chain,” he said.

PHA, a bacterially synthesized polymer, is produced from the fermentation of sugars. The bacteria used by Bio-on digest sugars in sugar beet molasses and produce PHAs, which are extracted and dried. The result is a white powder that can be further processed into products with properties comparable to objects made with traditional plastics, said Marco Astorri, Bio-on CEO. The bioplastic also is biodegradable.

Bio-on’s PHA has been used for a variety of things including home furnishings, mobile phones and food packaging, Marco said. Magna’s first job is to develop an automotive-grade resin, and to test the material in processes including thermoforming and injection molding.

Fahrländer said the company will pursue interior automotive applications first, and eventually expand to exterior products.

But with added sustainability comes added cost, at least for now.

“To reduce the carbon footprint of the car production, that is our main goal. The problem is the cost, and I think for the next year we will always have the problem with the cost for the biomaterials… so that is something we have to overcome,” Fahrländer said.

Testing will take place at Magna’s facility in Liberec, Czech Republic.

 
About us
company profile
company culture
version and strategy
company history
certification
patents
contact
News center
company news
industry news
media focus
video
Products
products catalog
technical support
Innovation
create value
production line
QA&QC
new technique info
Copyright:King-Tech China Co.,Ltd