Apr 5 2010
Rick Bell, global development manger for Renewable Materials - DuPont Automotive Performance Polymers joins a panel to discuss "Environmentally Friendly Interiors" on April 14 at 2 p.m. EST during the Society of Automotive Engineers World Congress in Detroit. He is responsible for the corporation's growing portfolio of high-performance renewably sourced materials.
"As the global automotive industry embraces the value of renewably sourced materials, it is important to engage in discussions throughout the value chain so that science can be put to work applying these materials to the right applications and developing even more products OEMs and consumers ultimately value," said Bell.
In the last year, DuPont Automotive has seen several commercial adoptions of its breakthrough new renewably sourced materials. Most recently, Toyota's adopted fibers made from DuPont Sorona renewably sourced polymer for the ceiling surface skin, sun visor and pillar garnish of Toyota's new model, SAI. SAI is an intensively ecological "compact luxury car" equipped with an overwhelming percentage of eco-plastics made from plant-based materials, which comprise approximately 60 percent of the car's internal surface area.
DuPont Automotive offers more than 100 materials and products to the global automotive industry and through its global application development network is committed to delivering cost-effective solutions to help reduce vehicle weight for better fuel economy and CO2 emission reductions, to integrate part functionality to simplify assembly and eliminate cost; and help bring invention to market fast, better and more cost-effectively. For more information, visit automotive.dupont.com.
DuPont is a science-based products and services company. Founded in 1802, DuPont puts science to work by creating sustainable solutions essential to a better, safer, healthier life for people everywhere. Operating in more than 70 countries, DuPont offers a wide range of innovative products and services for markets including agriculture and food; building and construction; communications; and transportation.