At 80, DuPont Nylon is Still Changing the World

Zytel(R) Drives Nylon from the Runway to the Highway and Beyond


GENEVA, Oct. 12, 2015 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- via PRWEB - If guitars, piano and voice shape music; and email, texts and blogs shape how we communicate; then nylon shapes ideas.

Now celebrating its 80th anniversary, the breakthrough material invented by DuPont Researcher Wallace Carothers in 1935 is credited for making many consumer goods – stockings, toothbrushes, hand-held devices – more affordable, attractive and accessible to everyone around the world. The lightweight material is frequently used to replace metal, lowering weight and cost and inviting design freedom and parts integration.

"Nylon revolutionized the fashion industry," said Debra Hughes, curator of collections and exhibits and the Hagley Museum and Library. "Beyond textile, nylon opened the world to new design ideas. It's a material that changed the world."

Nylon Timeline Milestones

Nylon's versatility and strength, backed by science to coax out added performance and a global development network to support customers, proved to be the formula that earned nylon its reputation and its place as one of DuPont's most successful products.

"If the performance launched the polymer, then design freedom helped it grow and adaptability keeps it young," said DuPont Performance Polymers President Patrick E. Lindner. "As long as designers can dream it, we can help them manufacture it."

Nylon's Versatility Shows in its Plastic Form

DuPont pioneered the science that transformed nylon fiber into an engineering polymer in the 1940s. Its exponential growth in that decade is in part credited to the U.S. government, which advised replacing metal with plastics wherever possible to support the war effort. Bottles, cups, even car parts were made lighter and more affordable during this decade.

In the 1950s DuPont trademarked the emerging flagship product DuPont™ Zytel® nylon and a decade later discovered that compounding the plastic with glass and other fillers amplified its functionality. Nylon was in a performance category all by itself and broke ground in automotive underhood applications, where the requirement of long-term resistance to heat and chemicals precluded the use of many plastics.

In 1992, General Motors adopted Zytel® nylon for one of its most popular and reliable engines – the 3800. This marked the first high-volume commercial adoption of nylon in an air-intake manifold in the United States and paved the way for a wholesale global shift from metal to plastic in manifolds and other automotive components over the next decade. By the time the venerable GM3800 engine retired in 2008, the 65 percent reduction in mass versus the prior aluminum design had eliminated the need for more than 2.6 million barrels of oil as a result of lower fuel consumption from this engine alone.

Design engineers found Zytel® not only reduced weight compared to metals, but also provided freedom to design and manufacture complex shapes, allowed for the integration of many components to enhance performance and enabled a lower total system cost for DuPont's industry partners.

Today DuPont™ Zytel® nylon is used all over the world in a variety of automotive components, such as air ducts, engine covers, charged air coolers, transmission components and radiator end tanks. In electrical and electronic systems, Zytel® nylon is widely used in enclosures, sockets, terminal blocks, circuit breakers, switches and relays.

Expanding the Family

DuPont also found that it could modify the polymer platform to bring design engineers new materials that helped them replace metals and other heavy, fragile or non-sustainable materials. In 1973 – the height of the oil shortage – DuPont introduced Zytel® Super Tough.

"The performance matched its name," said Richard Mayo, global business director for the nylon businesses in DuPont Performance Polymers. "And the automotive industry replaced metal in gas tanks, fasteners and engine components and throughout the vehicle to reduce vehicle weight and improve gas mileage." It wasn't long before design engineers started using Zytel® ST in appliances, wire insulation, sporting gear and home furnishings.

A few years later, DuPont again developed an innovative nylon polymer chemistry and introduced Zytel® HTN. This new high-performance polyamide spanned the performance gap between conventional engineering resins and much higher-cost specialty polymers. Zytel® HTN enabled even more precise engineering for uses including sensitive electrical and electronic components. It could be molded into much thinner components and it held its shape and dimensions despite exposure to heat and moisture.

"The ability to make parts thinner without sacrificing performance thrilled designers," said Mayo. "For example, the consumer electronics industry saw the unique balance of strength, stiffness and stability as a chance to make phone and tablet screens even larger while still managing the weight and feel and ran with it. The auto industry embraced the material's resistance to heat and moisture and adopted it throughout engine cooling and thermal systems."

Then, in 2010, just as the world was adopting more stringent fuel economy and emissions regulations, DuPont introduced another new polymer platform - Zytel® PLUS nylon – which maintains excellent performance levels much longer than traditional nylons despite exposure to hot oil, hot air, calcium chloride and other aggressive automotive chemicals. This was needed as the auto industry was improving vehicle efficiency, which drove up temperatures and pressures.

Most recently DuPont has developed a portfolio of renewable polymers derived from non-food crop sources. The growing Zytel® RS 610 and 1010 polymer family provides a sustainable alternative for handheld devices and underhood automotive components, like radiator end tanks, air hoses and fuel lines.

Growing the Market

Nylon's quick commercialization set the pace for expansion. DuPont built a full-scale nylon plant in Seaford, Del., in 1939 and added a second nylon plant in Martinsville, Va., just two years later. Today, DuPont is the largest, most globally networked nylon manufacturer focused on the engineering polymers market. Recent expansions include a 20 percent increase in DuPont™ Zytel® PA 66 and PA 6 production at its Uentrop facility in Hamm, Germany, in June. Earlier in March, DuPont announced a 10 percent increase in DuPont™ Zytel® HTN PPA production at its Richmond, Va., facility. Both were in support of growing global market demand in automotive and consumer electronics markets.

With a focus on quality and product consistency, DuPont manufactures a full range of PA66, PA6, PPA and Long Chain Polyamide (LCPA) resins in Europe, the Americas and Asia. DuPont owns and operates world-scale, continuous-polymerization assets for nylon in all three regions of the world and operates compounding sites in 13 countries to ensure local supply wherever customers are located.

"When you look at the portfolio at launch and where we have grown you can see where our science took cues from the market, but also where we helped industries and markets develop by giving design engineers materials that shape their ideas," said Lindner.

DuPont Performance Polymers works with design engineers throughout the world to help improve the performance, sustainability and cost of components used in automotive, aerospace, consumer electronics, health care, medical and other diversified industries. DuPont supports product development efforts with more than 40 manufacturing, development and research centers and technical teams to help ensure ideas go to market quickly and cost effectively.

DuPont (NYSE: DD) has been bringing world-class science and engineering to the global marketplace in the form of innovative products, materials, and services since 1802. The company believes that by collaborating with customers, governments, NGOs, and thought leaders we can help find solutions to such global challenges as providing enough healthy food for people everywhere, decreasing dependence on fossil fuels, and protecting life and the environment. For additional information about DuPont and its commitment to inclusive innovation, please visit http://www.dupont.com.

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10/12/15

The DuPont Oval Logo, DuPont™ and Zytel® are trademarks or registered trademarks of DuPont or its affiliates.

Additional Contacts:
Debra Hughes, Hagley Museum and Library, +1-302- 658-2400 ext. 308
Sophie Lu, DuPont (Asia Pacific), +86.21.3862 2392

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