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Covestro Officially Recognizes CFRTP as a New Material Class

My April blog “Continuous fiber thermoplastics are smart for world’s largest appliance manufacturer” discussed the development of a high-end production air conditioner using CFRTP composite materials by supplier Covestro and the world’s largest appliance company Haier. Now Covestro has trademarked these materials as Maezio, which include carbon or glass fibers impregnated with polycarbonate (PC), thermoplastic polyurethane (TPU) or other thermoplastic resins. Covestro produces unidirectional reinforced tapes and sheets at its production site in Markt Bibart, Germany.

Covestro Officially Recognizes CFRTP as a New Material Class  Covestro Officially Recognizes CFRTP as a New Material Class  Covestro Officially Recognizes CFRTP as a New Material Class

Maezio continuous fiber reinforced thermoplastic (CFRTP) materials are produced by Covestro in Markt Bibart, Germany. SOURCE: Covestro

“The brand gives us a clear and strong identity to further expand our expertise in thermoplastic composites,” says David Hartmann, Co-CEO for CFRTP composites alongside Dr. Michael Schmidt. “We believe the new brand can truly bring value to next-generation products across industries by delivering a combination of lightweight construction, specific strengths and finishes at a scale unreachable by advanced materials today.”

The variety of finishes Covestro is showing are indeed impressive. Covestro’s media page on Maezio features a video with interviews from multiple players along the supply chain who tout the material’s appealing aesthetics and design flexibility alongside its ability to break through the lightweight and low thickness boundaries of traditional metal and plastic materials.

Covestro Officially Recognizes CFRTP as a New Material Class Covestro Officially Recognizes CFRTP as a New Material Class  Covestro Officially Recognizes CFRTP as a New Material Class  Covestro Officially Recognizes CFRTP as a New Material Class

Covestro’s Maezio CFRTP materials are strong, lightweight and aesthetic, able to be combined into a reportedly unlimited number of products, giving designers new creative opportunities. SOURCE: Covestro.
 

Mass production for multiple markets

Covestro claims that widespread propagation of advanced composites has been hampered by lack of cost-effective and scalable manufacturing processes. In its media and press releases, the company notes that composites also have been difficult to integrate into high-volume products, but Maezio materials are changing this:

 

Covestro Officially Recognizes CFRTP as a New Material Class   Covestro Officially Recognizes CFRTP as a New Material Class  Covestro Officially Recognizes CFRTP as a New Material Class Covestro Officially Recognizes CFRTP as a New Material Class

SOURCE: Covestro

Maezio materials can reportedly be thermoformed with existing thermoforming tools at high yield rates and low cycle times for millions of parts per year. Other production technologies such as hybrid injection molding (overmolding), automated UD tape laying and automated fiber placement (AFP) can be easily integrated.

Covestro Officially Recognizes CFRTP as a New Material Class

RocTool is working with Covestro’s Maezio products in its composites processing developments for the consumer electronics industry. SOURCE: Covestro

As thermoplastic composites, Maezio products can also be recycled at the end of their useful life, making them “a perfect example of what scalable and sustainable composite solutions look like in giving industries the material tools to push boundaries,” says Co-CEO for CFRTP Michael Schmidt.

 

Covestro reports that Maezio is attracting interest in diverse market segments including the electrical and electronics industry, automotive, medical technology, sporting goods, athletic shoes and consumer goods like household appliances, furniture and luggage.

Note that Solvay, Premium AEROTEC and Faurecia Clean Mobility have also recently announced efforts toward high-volume thermoplastic composites production. 


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