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Nonwovens/​Converting

Lenzing expands offering for nonwovens

The Lenzing Group, a leader for wood-based specialty fibres, is expanding its offering of solutions for the cosmetics, hygiene and medical sectors.

9th January 2019

Innovation in Textiles
 |  Lenzing

Medical/Hygiene

The Lenzing Group, a market leader for wood-based specialty fibres, is expanding its offering of solutions for the cosmetics, hygiene and medical sectors. Heiko Arnold, Chief Technology Officer of the Lenzing Group, and Jürgen Lehmann, President of Hof University of Applied Sciences in Saale, Germany, have signed a cooperation agreement to utilize a new spunlacing line for nonwoven applications.

The collaboration between the company and the university will initially last for a period of five years and gives Lenzing access to use the machines and technologies. “This cooperation enables both partners to optimally use the nonwovens machine and comes close to being a unique form of collaboration between the research community and industry in this segment. Textiles are more than just clothing. At the university we offer the entire range of academic training, from bachelor’s and master’s degrees to doctoral programs. Textile engineering is a future-oriented profession,” said Jürgen Lehmann.

With this cooperation the Lenzing Group will be able to further expand its product portfolio. © Lenzing AG

The Lenzing Group will take advantage of this new technology centre for nonwoven applications located on the Münchberg Campus at the Hof University of Applied Sciences as soon as it has been completed at the beginning of 2020 and will focus on further developing and testing its fibres there. As a result, it will gain access to the newest state-of-the-art machinery and technologies which its customers and partners also use to process Lenzing fibres. In this way, it will be possible to develop new product qualities and applications in collaboration with the university.

“The cooperation with the Münchberg Competence Center of the Hof University of Applied Sciences is a further milestone in implementing the sCore TEN corporate strategy. It will enable us to intensify customer intimacy with our partners in the hygiene, cosmetics and medical industries and support them even more effectively in developing new products,” said Heiko Arnold. “This will serve as the basis for sustainable and innovative solutions which consumers can use in daily life with a good conscience.”

A significant share of Lenzing fibres is designed for daily cosmetics and hygiene products and is also being increasingly deployed for medical purposes. Many people come into contact every day with Lenzing fibres without knowing it, for example in face masks, cleansing tissues, baby wipes, incontinence products or moist toilet tissues.

“We have been working together for many years with all customers and partners along the value chain and also aim to intensify our cooperation with manufacturers of brand-name products. Utilisation of the facilities made available by the Hof University of Applied Sciences will allow us to carry out more extensive testing and develop new applications more quickly,” commented Wolfgang Plasser, Vice President Global Business Management Nonwovens. “As a result, we will open up new product groups in the medical sector, for example in wound care, in light of the fact that nonwovens made of our fibres do not contain any chemical binding agents.”

With this cooperation the Lenzing Group will be able to further expand its product portfolio. Its fibres made of the sustainable raw material wood boast a particularly good ecological footprint, are biodegradable and are considered to be a viable solution against the increasing plastic pollution of land and water.

www.lenzing.com

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