Bayer MaterialScience builds carbon nanotubes plant

Anti-Corrosion Methods and Materials

ISSN: 0003-5599

Article publication date: 12 January 2010

93

Citation

(2010), "Bayer MaterialScience builds carbon nanotubes plant", Anti-Corrosion Methods and Materials, Vol. 57 No. 1. https://doi.org/10.1108/acmm.2010.12857aab.008

Publisher

:

Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2010, Emerald Group Publishing Limited


Bayer MaterialScience builds carbon nanotubes plant

Article Type: Industrial news From: Anti-Corrosion Methods and Materials, Volume 57, Issue 1

Bayer MaterialScience AG has begun construction of a new facility for the production of carbon nanotubes (CNTs) in Chempark Leverkusen, Germany. The new plant will have a capacity of 200 tons/year. The company will invest about €22 million in the planning, development, and construction of the plant.

“Bayer MaterialScience AG is investing in a key technology of the future that will open up a broad range of new applications for us,” said Joe Ventura, Business Development Manager, Bayer MaterialScience LLC. “Bayer MaterialScience AG is one of the few companies that can produce carbon nanotubes of consistently high quality on an industrial scale,” continued Ventura.

A pilot plant with an annual capacity of 60 tons has been in operation in Laufenburg in southern Germany since 2007. Production involves a catalytic process in which the CNTs are obtained from a carbon-containing gas at elevated temperature in a reactor.

Bayer MaterialScience LLC recently obtained regulatory approval from the US Environmental Protection Agency to sell Baytubes®, its multi-wall CNTs, in the USA. The approval covers Baytubes® C 150 P and HP grades that are currently produced in the Laufenburg plant.

Bayer MaterialScience can now take a product from the research laboratory to a broad spectrum of applications relevant to society, such as energy, the environment, mobility, safety, and construction. Baytubes are already being used to produce tough, extremely strong, lightweight materials. This means, for example, that rotor blades for wind turbines are more energy efficient, that transport containers weigh less and that sports equipment can be made more robust.

More information is available from: www.bayermaterialscience.com

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