13 January 2010, Leverkusen - Bayer MaterialScience has
developed a carpet which it says feels like a forest floor and based on
polyurethane foams and a special textile fabric. The new floor covering´s
viscoelastic properties not only offer a high level of comfort, but also reduce
the strain on joints and limbs, Bayer says. The company says the development opens
up potential applications for sports, the workplace and physiotherapy – at
supermarket checkouts or in gyms, for instance – in addition to those in the
home and commercial and public buildings. Kymo GmbH will produce and market the
carpet under the trade name Pure Moss.
“Walking across this carpet feels like walking over soft
moss. The foam is designed not to be fully compressed underfoot, but only to a
certain depth. Since the underfoot area yields without taking large parts of
the surrounding area with it, the foam surrounds the foot and gives it a firm
grip. This results in a completely new feeling, whether you are walking,
standing or indeed sitting on the carpet,” explains Manfred Naujoks, an expert
on flexible polyurethane foam at Bayer MaterialScience.
The company considered it very important to find a licensing
partner who would use the opportunities offered by the new floorwear innovation
creatively and help it gain a foothold in the market by coming up with some
unusual designs. It opted for kymo GmbH in Karlsruhe.
“In kymo, we have found a partner that has helped several
new carpet materials achieve market success with its fresh, avant-garde design
ideas, making it one of Germany’s leading high-end manufacturers of floorwear
for both domestic use and prestigious commercial and public buildings,”
continues Naujoks.
In kymo’s eyes, the main attraction of the cooperation lies
in Bayer MaterialScience’s extensive polymer know-how. “With this expertise
behind us, we can think outside the box when developing design concepts for
viscoelastic carpets and focus our full attention on our real strength, namely
developing original and well thought-out designs,” says Denis Türker, Managing
Director of kymo. The young company will be unveiling its first viscoelastic
carpet under the name Pure Moss as part of its experimental range at the
international furnishing show ‘imm cologne’ in January 2010 in Cologne.
Wide-ranging control over properties
The new carpet concept is based on a four-layered structure.
The top layer is an overlay of bielastic knitted fabric (fabric of which the
loops which form the mesh are capable of moving relative to one another in the
knit direction and perpendicular to the knit direction) with a soft, long-pile
texture. Below this is a viscoelastic polyurethane layer and, underneath that,
a rebonded foam made from recycled polyurethane material. The bottom layer in
contact with the floor is a thin reinforcing fabric that stabilizes the entire
structure and protects the less tear-resistant layers above against tensile
forces, for example when laying the carpet.
The two polyurethane foam layers have very different
hardnesses. The viscoelastic polyurethane layer is very soft, initially
allowing the foot to sink in. The far harder rebonded foam stops the
compression at a specific depth, preventing the entire foam structure from being
fully compressed. Thanks to the bielastic fabric, the foam structure only gives
way directly under the foot and not in the surrounding area. “The modular
principle enables wide-ranging control over the polyurethane layers’ mechanical
properties, such as hardness and elasticity modulus, to suit different
applications,” explains Naujoks.
Many possible workplace, sports and domestic applications
Bayer says that the new carpets’ viscoelastic properties not
only offer a high level of comfort, but also reduce the strain on joints and
limbs. This opens up potential applications for sports, the workplace and
physiotherapy – in gyms or at supermarket checkouts, for instance – in addition
to those in the home and commercial/public buildings. There are also some
promising potential applications in rooms frequented by young children or the
elderly, the company says. “If a child or elderly person falls over, for
example, the force of the impact is significantly reduced, which lessens the
risk of injury. It may also be possible to create mobile modular seating.
What’s more, the high polyurethane foam content gives viscoelastic carpets
excellent insulating properties that help save heating energy. They also dampen
impact and airborne noise,” says Bayer.
With 2008 sales of EUR 9.7 billion, Bayer MaterialScience is
among the world’s largest polymer companies. Business activities are focused on
the manufacture of high-tech polymer materials and the development of
innovative solutions for products used in many areas of daily life. The main segments
served are the automotive, electrical and electronics, construction and the
sports and leisure industries. At the end of 2008, Bayer MaterialScience had 30
production sites and employed approximately 15,100 people around the globe.
Bayer MaterialScience is a Bayer Group company.
kymo is a German label for contemporary floorwear. In
keeping with the brand’s philosophy – ‘Go on. And create.’ – the kymo
collection is characterized by a stylish, fresh and modern approach. Founded in
2005, kymo has now found its way into high-end interior design stores in more
than 50 countries. Numerous well-known brands and companies such as Hugo Boss,
Mercedes-Benz, MTV and Montblanc have all used kymo carpets for their shop
projects or product presentations.