MOSCOW (MRC) -- BASF helps make sporting goods more sustainable, new high-performance materials to enable infinite recycling of sports shoes and ultimately single-step production, said the producer on its site.
BASF is one of ten members of industry and science working together on the project "Sport Infinity". Spearheaded by adidas and funded by the European Commission, the three-year project aims at identifying and developing recyclable, partly waste-based, textile fiber reinforced composites. These materials enable the fast production of easily customizable sporting goods.
The research program focuses on football sporting goods, in particular shoes. In a design-driven approach, the automation potential of various molding processes will be exploited, potentially enabling the production of a shoe in one step. The goal is a new breed of sporting goods that will not be discarded, but reused. A used football shoe, for instance, could be collected and shredded into tiny pieces, of which every gram is reprocessed. Combined with virgin material and reinforced with selected fiber from similar or alternative waste sources, a new shoe can be manufactured.
The challenge lies in achieving the desired product performance level in a repeated material recycling loop. BASF’s extensive polymer know-how will play an integral part in developing new materials and tailoring them to the manufacturing process. Recyclability is a determining parameter in the material selection process.
"We are delighted to join nine highly ranked partners in this project" says Juergen Weiser, Director Technology, Performance Materials, BASF. "We are focusing on special new polymers with a broad mechanical property range. The goal is to create a recyclable product that can be fine-tuned to a variety of applications and related processes. Developing new and disruptive cradle-to-cradle sporting good concepts together with partners along the entire value chain is a perfect fit for us."
Polymers, either from industrial or sportswear waste sources, will be reengineered to the key manufacturing processes for Sport Infinity. These processes utilize almost every gram of material and do not produce waste. Moreover, they enable consumers to customize their football shoes in shape, color, and design. Consumers can thus become creators without having to worry about waste. Ultimately, the goal is to optimize the process to a degree that enables the highly automated production of shoes in a single process step.
In order to turn this vision into reality, Sport Infinity brings together partners from various disciplines. From specialty equipment manufacturers to processing experts, from major chemical suppliers to fiber and textile processors, from industrial design to knowledge management, as well as the sportswear brand and a football academy partner. Consequently, the project consortium covers the entire value chain to achieve one common goal: sustainable, customizable high performance football sporting goods made in Europe.
As MRC informed previously, in April 2016, BASF opened a world-scale bioacrylamide (BioACM) production facility at its Bradford, UK site. The new production plant at Bradford adds to BASF’s bioacrylamide capacity worldwide, however BASF has not disclosed new or existing capacity figures. BASF operates a polyacrylamides production hub at Bradford. Polyacrylamides are used as water-soluble flocculation aids in industrial and municipal wastewater treatment, enhanced oil recovery, mineral processing, and paper making.
BASF is the largest diversified chemical company in the world and is headquartered in Ludwigshafen, Germany. BASF produces a wide range of chemicals, for example solvents, amines, resins, glues, electronic-grade chemicals, industrial gases, basic petrochemicals and inorganic chemicals. The most important customers for this segment are the pharmaceutical, construction, textile and automotive industries. BASF generated sales of more than EUR70 billion in 2015.
MRC