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News Releases
DATE: 8-9-99
CONTACTS:
Dan Edie, Clemson, (864) 656-4535
Click here to e-mail above
E.O. Oakley, Hoechst, (704) 554-3388
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e-mail above
WRITERS:
Sandy Dees, (864) 656-4193
Click here to e-mail above
Brandon Uttley, (704) 335-9829
Click here to e-mail above
Donation valued at $12 million
HOECHST RESEARCH TECHNOLOGY DONATES
CUT RESISTANT FIBER PATENTS TO CLEMSON UNIVERSITY
CLEMSON -- Hoechst Research Technology (HRT) announced Monday
(today) that it has donated patent and other intellectual property
rights for its aramid cut resistant fiber technology to Clemson
University's Center for Advanced Engineering Fibers and Films
(CAEFF). The donation is valued at $12 million.
Hoechst developed the technology to increase the cut or slice
resistance of a variety of manmade fibers and films. The patent
and other rights donated to Clemson relate specifically to cut
resistant applications with aramid polymers. (Aramids are polymers
which can be formed into engineered fibers.) AlliedSignal Technologies,
Inc., which is also a partner in the Clemson center, previously
acquired Hoechst's patents and other rights relating to cut resistant
applications for other, non-aramid polymers.
Potential uses for the technology include cut resistant gloves
for use in industry; slash-resistant seating in airlines, buses
and trains; and improved protective garments for use by law enforcement
personnel and other industrial workers.
"We are grateful to Hoechst Research Technology for this
donation," said the center's director and Clemson University
Dow Professor of Chemical Engineering Dan Edie. "They are
providing the patent and other rights, including process equipment
and computer modeling technology, that will help us estimate
how the Hoechst technology improves the damage resistance in
a fiber. This will allow us to verify the impact of the technology
and explore new applications for additional industries."
"With the rights to these patents, Clemson will be able
to conduct extensive research and development work," said
Hoechst Cut Resistant Technology Manager E.O. Oakley Jr. "Hoechst
reviewed a number of universities before we chose Clemson, based
on their extensive work in advanced engineering fibers and films.
We believe they will create new ways of using the cut resistant
technology that will be most valuable in the marketplace."
Ray Rupp, CAEFF's industrial liaison, predicted extensive market
opportunities for the technology. "We also foresee the potential
for spin-off companies, which could strengthen South Carolina's
economy and benefit the state as a whole."
While this cut resistant technology is still in its commercial
infancy, Hoechst already has worked with leading industrial and
safety glove manufacturers to develop cut resistant gloves for
use in industry. The gloves have proven effective at protecting
workers against mechanical cuts and abrasion hazards. Standard
industry tests indicate this technology, originally developed
by Hoechst, more than doubles the cut resistance of the base
polymer.
Hoechst's North American industrial businesses have had a long-standing
relationship with Clemson through the support of the university's
engineering and chemistry programs. These businesses are part
of Hoechst's global industrial companies, which are world leaders
in commodity chemicals, acetate fibers and engineering plastics.
Hoechst plans to spin off these global industrial businesses
into a new company called Celanese AG later this year.
The donation to Clemson -- the largest corporate gift in the
university's history -- comes almost one year later to the day
of the announcement of the Center for Advanced Engineering Fibers
and Films.
"This 'patented partnership' will be a catalyst for additional
industrial support. The more we do, the more industries see what
can be done," said Thomas Keinath, dean of Clemson's College
of Engineering and Science. "It's a wonderful time to be
at Clemson."
The National Science Foundation established CAEFF as one of the
nation's elite Engineering Research Centers in 1998. CAEFF is
the only national Engineering Research Center to target fiber
and film research. The fiber and film industry, dominant in the
South, accounts for 25 percent of the manufacturing segment of
the U.S. gross domestic product. The center, in partnership with
industry and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, seeks
to advance engineering research and education in areas critical
to the long-term competitiveness of U.S. fiber and film based
industries.
END
A related low-resolution photo or graphic suitable for
SCREEN VIEWING ONLY
is available at
ftp://clemsonews.clemson.edu/graphics/slice.GIF
and a high-resolution version suitable for
DOWNLOADING FOR PUBLICATION ONLY is available at
ftp://clemsonews.clemson.edu/graphics/slice.TIF
Picture Cutline: A computer-generated blade (depicted
by broken-line edging) is shown as it moves through cut resistant
fiber utilizing the technology originally developed by Hoechst
Research & Technology. Ceramic platelets in the mix increase
the cut resistance by redistributing the stresses introduced
by the slicing blade. The platelets redistribute the energy of
the cutting action in much the same way that snow shoes redistribute
a walker's weight.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Clemson University
Center for Advanced Engineering
Fibers and Films
- The Clemson University Center for Advanced Engineering Fibers
and Films, formed in 1998, is the only federally-designated center
in the nation to deal exclusively with fibers and films, a vital
component of the overall U.S. economy and the dominant industry
in the South.
- The center, in partnership with industry and the Massachusetts
Institute of Technology, seeks to advance engineering research
and education in areas critical to the long-term competitiveness
of U.S. fiber and film industries.
- Over its lifetime, the center is expected to generate approximately
$100 million in research support to Clemson.
- Clemson's ground-breaking research efforts could collapse
the normal research and development process of seven years to
mere seconds.
- Central to the center's mission is the concept of "designed"
materials - fibers and films produced using computer-based 3-D
analysis, modeling and simulation. By using virtual-reality programs,
researchers will be able to "walk" into the molecular
structure of a fiber or film and manipulate final properties.
- Clemson is now one of approximately 25 Engineering Research
Centers in the nation and the only National Science Foundation
center targeting fiber and film research.
- Under the center's directive, students will be taught new
ways of learning engineering and science. Components of the education
revolution include cooperative-education opportunities for undergraduates,
in-plant research through a graduate-level industrial residency
program and pre-college outreach programs designed to attract
younger students to engineering and science disciplines.
- Partnering industries include Hoechst Research & Technology,
3M, BP Amoco, AlliedSignal Inc., Collins and Aikman Group, Cryovac
Division of Sealed Air Corp., DuPont, Dow Chemical Co., Celanese
Acetate, Kemet, KoSa, MSNW Inc., N.H. Andreas Co. Inc., Poly-Med,
Raytheon STX and Shell Chemical Co.
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