Automotive Design and Production

MAR 2014

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by Zachary Peterson > Associate Editor Luxus ( luxus.co.uk ) is a British plastics company has supplied automotive plastics for 30 years, mainly producing interior trim components. It's now committed to developing recycled plastics into new compounds for more sustainable products. Luxus recently developed an innovative polypropylene (PP) for interior trim moldings called Hycolene, which greatly reduces talc fller by using an additive instead. This new compound saves weight and contains 49% recycled material. Hycolene is also more scratch-resistant than traditional, higher talc- flled PP—an important characteristic for Class A interior components. Teaming with additive manufacturer Milliken ( millikenchemical.com ), Luxus leveraged the company's Hyperform reinforcing additive to create the Hycolene compound. Hyperform boasts higher stifness and impact resistance than talc-flled components, and most importantly, weighs less. This additive also allows for faster production times and reduced warpage compared to talc. Luxus tested the new Hycolene material by molding an interior door trim component for the Nissan Qashqai. Luxus currently produces a 40% recycled content PP interior door trim for the production Qashqai. The improved grade matched the performance of the existing compound, and Hycolene took to the existing injection mold without requiring a new mold. "We basically introduced the new material to the mold and it took to it straight away without any issues," says Terry Burton, technical manager for Luxus. "We made a like-to-like material, despite the fact that we took the compound from a 25% talc-flled product right down to a lower-flled product." Hycolene contains 10% talc, Burton notes. The talc reduction not only helps save 10 to 12% of weight-per-part, but also lessens what Burton calls the "whitening efect" of higher talc content, helping to make plastic parts with crisper coloration. "With less talc content, we can go to sharper blacks because you need less pigment," Burton explains though he admits, "Mainly we can do dark gray and black, but we can do lighter colors on a smaller volume of material." Hycolene is currently being evaluated by a number of OEMs, Burton says. The material costs more than higher talc-based plastics at this time, but this is ofset by the number of moldings achieved per ton of compound. Additional Hycolene grades are in development, and the possibility for greater color variations could make the compound attractive for luxury vehicles in particular, he adds. A plastics compounder in the UK proves lightweighting and sustainability aren't mutually exclusive objectives, at least not for interior trim parts. t A prototype for the interior door trim of the Nissan Qashqai uses the 49% recycled plastic content polypropylene material Hycolene, made by Luxus, saving 10 to 12% of weight-per-part compared to the existing compound used in the production of the Qashqai. Interior Plastics the Sustainable Way Reducing Weight for AD&P; > March 2014 > FEATURE > Reducing Weight for Interior Plastics the Sustainable Way > Zachary Peterson > zpeterson@autofeldguide.com 30 0314ADP FEATURE Luxus.indd 30 2/18/2014 3:30:42 PM

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