Frankfurt, Germany – According to the German Association of the Yarns, Woven Fabrics and Technical Textiles Industry (Industrieverband Garne – Gewebe – Technische Textilien e.V. – IVGT), more than 40 fiber-based applications with a total surface area of 35 square meters go into the production of the average car today. In view of this, it is hardly surprising that designers and engineers from the automobile industry rank among the most important groups of visitors at Techtextil (in Frankfurt am Main from 9 to 12 May).
Techtextil is increasingly popular in the automobile sector
“The pursuit of targets such as weight reduction, increased comfort and sustainability is a driving force behind the use of textiles in cars”, says Philipp Porst, Deputy CEO of C. H. Müller. Among the products made by the Techtextil exhibitor are laminated and coated composites made of synthetic leather, textiles, leather and natural materials for system suppliers, such as Yanfeng (formerly Johnson Controls), Grupo Antolin and Faurecia; from there, the composites go to OEMs, such as Audi, BMW, Mercedes and VW, in the form of seats, trim panels and parcel shelves.

The focus of the Mobiltech area of application at Techtextil is on materials that can also be used for automobile interiors
At the fair, the company from Heinsdorfergrund in Northeast Germany will present ‘Velamina’, a new trim material made of polyester microfibre for automobile interiors. “We wanted to combine the high-grade appearance and touch of modern micro-fibre surface finishes with ecologically sustainable polyester”, says Porst, who is using the fair specifically to present newly developed mobile textiles. According to Porst, the companyΆs development department is working not only on fibre materials and surface finishes but also on textile switches, electrodes and sensors. “It wonΆt be long before it will be possible to charge mobile telephones on inductive areas of car seats”, says Porst.
Première with panorama
In a report for the Supply Industry Working Group, the IVGT association, which represents 9,000 automotive suppliers with an annual turnover of € 218 billion, forecasts that the world market for automobile textiles will be worth around US $ 32 billion by 2024. By way of comparison: annual revenues of the German textile industry amounted to ¤ 10.8 billion in 2016 (excluding apparel). “For the coming fair, we expect to welcome over 650 exhibitors with products and materials for use in cars and trucks, including emergency and safety vehicles”, says Techtextil Director Michael Jänecke.
One of these exhibitors is Rökona, a textile supplier based in the Southwest German town of Tübingen. A specialist for knitted fabrics, dyeing and finishing on a large scale for OEMs and automotive suppliers, Rökona will be showing a new, patented shade solution for panorama roofs in Frankfurt. “With this new product, we can achieve a high degree of shade with a great increase in roof thickness”, says Rökona CEO Arved Westerkamp. Thus, the cassette, into which the panorama roof rolls when open, should be significantly smaller in future. Another new, completely different four-wheel development will be making its world debut at Techtextil 2017: RökonaΆs engineers have placed their knowledge of childrenΆs seats at the disposal of the Erdenkind start-up for a three-in-one pram using Oekotex-certified fibre material. “This is the first time that automotive knitting technology has been used for a pram”, says Westerkamp. Thanks to a special mechanism, the pram seat can ΅growΆ with the child.

Headliner as yard goods: the raw-materials warehouse of Rökona provides an unusual view of tomorrowΆs car headliners
To Mars with mobile textiles
The aerospace sector is a traditional part of the Mobiltech area of application. Hence, mobile textiles will play a significant role at the ΅Living in SpaceΆ special area organised in cooperation with the European Space Agency (ESA) and the German Aerospace Centre (Deutsches Zentrum für Luft- und Raumfahrt – DLR)). There, the wide spectrum of uses for technical textiles will be vividly illustrated by a future mission to Mars.
For example, Zimmermann from the Allgäu region of South Germany, a company that makes yarns for safety belts and plied yarn for airbags, will show a carbon yarn that Augsburg-based MT Aerospace used to make a housing for the solid-fuel booster rocket of the Ariane 6. According to ESA, this satellite-launching rocket, which is still in the development phase, will make its first flight in 2020. DLR says that components made of carbon-fibre reinforced plastic are used, inter alia, to make mountings for solar panels, e.g., on the ISS, as well as heat-protection tiles on space vehicles or, in combination with aluminium honeycomb structures – for rocket fairings.

Lift off: Visitors to the ΅Living in SpaceΆ special area will be able to see mobile textiles such as those used in satellite launching rockets such as this Ariane 5
Mobiltech – the second-biggest area of application at Techtextil
Seat covers, headliners, safety belts, filters, hoses, airbags, instrument panels and, increasingly, automotive parts made of fibre-reinforced plastic – designers and engineers from the automobile sector and other industries will find the latest trends and research and development results from the mobiletextile field at Techtextil. Almost half of the approx. 1,470 exhibitors present materials, products and innovations for the Mobiltech area of application.
Source: Messe Frankfurt