Sunday, July 26, 2009

GÖTZINGER





We build special machines for the production of louvre doors, consisting of an automatic louvre cutter, a heading device and a louvre frame clamp. Our range also includes finger-jointing lines consisting of a finger jointing clamp, a glue applicator and a finger jointing cutter formerly built by FESTO/HOLZ-HER and the K 15 hole and harware boring machine. The same applies, for example, to the rod profiler, the universal profiler, the wall-mounting and pedestal-type chain mortiser, and supplies of spare parts for the type ZA tenon and mortise cutting machine. We have designed and built a door support to supplement the wall-mounting and pedestal-type chain mortiser. Other successful products include the olive boring machine (for olive-shaped handles) and a corner-bearing boring machine as a low-price accessory. We also build special machines to customer wishes.

Product range
image 1, source: GÖTZINGER

Machine Tools Germany - Deutschland Machine Tools Supplier






The company Aachener Maschinenbau (AMBA) was founded in Aachen in 1908. About 50 years ago AMBA started manufacturing machines for production of spokes and nipples for bicycles and motorbikes. Based on these products the first AMBA boltmaker was developed.

Today AMBA boltmakers and other cold forming machines are found in the fastener industry worldwide. Main advantage of AMBA boltmakers is their modular set-up which combines heading and threading in one machine including the possibility of two different threads on the blank. A full-size AMBA BM 12 for example includes cutting, heading, extruding, pointing and threading for screws and bolt up to ½" in diameter and 60" in length. A high-speed AMBA 68 for screws size ¼" x 10" is capable to produce up to 230 ppm.

The first flat die thread roller worldwide to produce full threaded screws up to 600 mm (24") in length was developed in 2005. This machine can be equipped with dies up to 12" in length. Currently AMBA is projecting a new generation of flat die thread roller with dies up to 24" in length.

Nonwovens / Technical Textiles






























Nonwovens For Medical Applications
Innovations in the growing nonwoven medical textiles sector include new products aimed at infection prevention.
Janet Bealer Rodie, Managing Editor
N onwoven textiles play a significant role in the medical sector. The product range includes surgical gowns, masks and other wearable products; surgical drapes, pads; dressings; filtration materials; and implantable textiles such as tissue scaffolds for rebuilding internal organs, among other products.

By far, most nonwoven products used outside the body are disposable, single-use articles that have the advantage of not requiring sterilization or cleaning for reuse. However, there are some that can be reused to provide the required function over a limited period of time.

In North America, disposable nonwoven medical apparel products alone represent a market totaling nearly $1.46 billion, according to the Association of the Nonwoven Fabrics Industry (INDA), Cary, N.C.; and the market is growing by approximately 1 to 2 percent annually. Globally, the medical nonwoven disposables market is forecast to grow to $12 billion annually by 2010, according to market research firm Global Industry Analysts Inc., San Jose, Calif.

Products used inside the body may provide a basis for cells to grow and regenerate tissue — for example, a ligament that has been destroyed or damaged that can be regenerated using a bioabsorbable material that eventually becomes indistinguishable from the ligament itself.

Manufacturing processes used to make these medical nonwovens include needlepunch; hydroentangling; spunbond, meltblown and a combination of the two; and thermal bonding. Bicomponent splittable or fibrillated fibers, nanotechnology and fiber modification also play important roles in some recent developments, a number of them involving filtration and barrier technologies.

“Nanofibers are becoming very popular for medical textiles used to filter viruses and bacteria,” said Jeff Haggard, vice president of technology at West Melbourne, Fla.-based Hills Inc., a developer of man-made fiber technology and machinery. Hills has been a pioneer in the development of bicomponent fibers as well as meltblown and spunbond technologies and their applications, and it offers meltblown technology that can produce fibers in the range between 25 and 400 nanometers (nm), with an average size of 250 nm.

A Collaborative Development
Collaborations between research institutes and private industry have yielded numerous important developments in the nonwoven medical textile field. As one example, Pathogen Removal and Diagnostic Technologies Inc. (PRDT), a joint venture between ProMetic BioSciences Ltd., England, and the American Red Cross, Washington, has developed a filter to remove prion protein from red blood cell concentrate. Prions are responsible for degenerative brain diseases such as mad cow disease and other such diseases, including its human cousin and the target of this filter, variant Creutzfeld-Jakob disease. The filter, marketed in the United Kingdom by France-based MacoPharma S.A. under the brand name P-CAPT™, comprises a target-specific affinity resin sandwiched between nonwoven membranes using a calendering process. The membrane development was carried out through a collaboration with the Nonwovens Cooperative Research Center (NCRC) at North Carolina State University (NCSU). The effort brought together prion experts at the University of Maryland, and chemical engineers involved in bioseparations and NCRC nonwovens staff and engineers at NCSU.

The P-CAPT™ filter for removing prion protein from
red blood cell concentrate comprises a target-specific
affinity resin sandwiched between nonwoven membranes.
Photo and schematic courtesy of MacoPharma S.A.

Disease Prevention: Multiple-Use Protection
Current warnings of a swine flu (H1N1) pandemic must be providing a boon to nonwoven face mask and respirator sales, as people around the world have been shown wearing the masks in an effort to avoid inhaling the virus or spreading possible infection to others. The US Department of Health and Human Services has established a website, www.flu.gov, to provide information about H1N1, avian flu (H5N1) and pandemic flu in general. The website includes a page with information and guidance provided by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the Occupational Safety and Health Administration about the use of masks and respirators to protect against infection. Numerous other websites offered by health organizations and governments around the world also provide relevant information.

Mask manufacturers reportedly are escalating their operations to meet the increased demand. “ We’ve gotten some big orders in several countries and are ramping up production,” said John Dolan, CEO, Carey International Ltd., a Westerly, R.I.-based worldwide distributor of a new, multiple-use respirator mask made with a needlepunched, four-ply fabric comprising two outer layers featuring Agion® silver/copper zeolite compounds permanently embedded into the fiber and two inner filtration layers to prevent microbial or other particle penetration. The outer layers have been shown to kill Streptococcus pyogenes, methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus and other bacteria; and inactivate H1N1, H5N1, the common cold and other viruses. The filtration layers comply with National Institute of Occupational Safety and Health N95 and N99 standards.

The N99 mask — certified according to European Respiratory Protection Standard EN149:2001 FFP3 level to have 99-percent-or-greater particle filtration effcacy, and also approved by Canadian regulatory agencies — is currently available outside the United States. It has been shown in trials to be effective for at least 28 days, compared with eight to 12 hours effective use for standard single-use masks; and the cost per day of use of the mask is about one-tenth of the cost of a single-use mask.

Bill Hurst, director of business development at Wakefield, Mass.-based Agion, said the silver and copper work synergistically to provide faster antimicrobial action than silver alone. “ The ionic exchange between the copper and the sulfur that makes up the bacterium cell membrane helps compromise that membrane,” he said.

Conclusion
Products such as the P-CAPT blood filter and the N99 respirator mask are but two innovations being offered in the growing nonwoven medical textile market. New fiber and processing technologies as well as collaborative, multidisciplinary efforts will contribute to ongoing product development and further market growth.

Undergraduate Frequently Asked Questions





About the Field
What is Chemical Engineering?
Chemical Engineering combines math, physics, chemistry, biology, and engineering to solve a wide range of industrial problems in a safe and economical fashion.

How long does it take to become a Chemical Engineer?
The B.S. program in Chemical Engineering takes five years to complete. During these five years, students receive 36 months (12 terms) of resident instruction and three 6 month periods of practical engineering experience (Co-op) dispersed throughout the sophomore, pre-junior and junior years. By graduation, B.S. students have obtained a degree as well as practical work experience.

What career options do Chemical Engineers have?
Chemical engineers have career opportunities in chemical process industries (CPI), biotechnology, advanced materials, design and construction, electronics, environmental, safety, and health industries, the food and beverages industries, and many other industries.

Chemical Engineering

Students in Chemical Engineering graduate programs experience high-quality, challenging, and exciting interdisciplinary research in a dynamic and cohesive environment.
Graduate students have access to leading facilities within the department and the university, as well as to research groups with strong links to international researchers and industry (e.g. DuPont, Xerox, SAS, BP Chemicals France, Praxair). Finally, the program has a dynamic group of award-winning researchers that are strongly committed to research, graduate supervision and teaching at a nationally and internationally recognized research university

Adhesive Systems, Inc

If you are looking for adhesives, we have just about any kind that will satisfy your packaging and bottling needs.

Product Line:

Barrier Coatings
Hot Melt Adhesives
Low Application Temperature Adhesives
Radiation Curable Adhesives
Specialty Adhesives
Water-Base Adhesives
Pre-Applied Adhesives

Recycled Polymeric Materials

The commitment to creativity and belief in new technological possibilities by Diversified Chemical Technologies, Inc. has given life to Recycled Polymeric Materials (RPM).

RPM produces polyurethane components that contain 25% recycled rubber mesh from used tires. Via a patent-pending ambient temperature reaction injection molding process, this system combines the newest in Polyurethane chemistry with post-consumer waste material, producing components of virtually any geometry which can be used as direct replacements for vulcanized EPDM parts.
Our products can currently be found on over 17,000,000 Ford, GM, Honda, Nissan, DaimlerChrysler and BMW vehicles around the world, sealing areas most critical to OEMs.
Environmental Benefits
How often do you have the opportunity to protect the environment, improve your product, and improve your financials? Recycled Polymeric Materials products allow our automotive customers to achieve all of these goals.

Our commitment to both the environment and technological improvements, have led to the development of Foamed Rubber Parts made out of 30% recycled tire rubber. This line of products have proven to be lighter in weight, require less energy to manufacture, show an increase in durability, and assist in the elimination of 60,000 used tires every year.
Research & Development
The unique nature of RPM technology is that the scope is not confined to the automotive industry. On-going and future projects include rubberized concrete for reduced construction costs and increased durability. In addition, RPM is pursuing the use of ASR (automotive shredder residue) as a quality replacement for wood in multiple areas, which may also reduce construction costs. Future applications are being contemplated regarding the expansion of this technology, and RPM will be there.