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DSM wins SPE Automotive Innovation Award for bio-based EcoPaXX integrated crankshaft cover for Volkswagen Group diesels

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EcoPaXX crankshaft cover. Click to enlarge.

A lightweight multi-functional crankshaft cover in Royal DSM’s EcoPaXX high-performance polyamide 410 was top in the Powertrain category at the Society of Plastics Engineers Automotive Division Innovation Awards Competition and Gala in Detroit. The 70% bio-based EcoPaXX is made principally from topical castor beans and is 100% carbon neutral from cradle to gate. Castor oil is obtained from the Ricinus Communis plant, which grows in tropical regions on relatively poor soil, and does not compete with the food-chain.

The EcoPaXX crankshaft cover is produced by DSM’s automotive component specialist partner KACO in Germany for the latest generation of MDB-4 TDI diesel engines developed by the Volkswagen Group. The engines are fitted to various car models made by VW, Audi, Seat and Škoda. Dr. Lutz Wohlfarth from Volkswagen, and Marcio Lima from KACO were both at the Gala in Detroit to collect the SPE award.

EcoPaXX belongs to the family of the “long-chain polyamides” and offers all their traditional advantages including low moisture absorption and excellent chemical resistance. However, it also offers a high melting point—the highest of all bio-based polyamides (up to 250 ˚C)—plus a high crystallization rate typical of engineering plastics like polyamide 6 and polyamide 46.

Every year, the Automotive Division of the international Society of Plastics Engineers (SPE) highlights innovation in advanced technologies with its Innovation Awards for parts and modules used in new vehicles. The program is the oldest and largest competition of its kind; this is the 44th time the awards have been presented.

The SPE recognized the numerous environmental and economic advantages of the new part and the technologies used to make it. The EcoPaXX crankshaft cover weighs around 40% less than a crankshaft cover with similar geometry made in aluminum, and so represents an important step in improving fuel efficiency in cars. Because the finished cover weighs so much less, vehicles run more efficiently, saving fuel and reducing carbon dioxide emissions throughout their lifetime.

KACO produces the crankshaft covers in an integrated fully automated process that involves insert molding a 50% glass fiber reinforced grades of EcoPaXX polyamide 410 over a plasma-activated dynamic PTFE seal, and then co-molding this with a liquid silicone rubber static seal. KACO itself developed and patented the plasma process, which replaces a wet activation process involving solvents.

In addition to these environmental advantages, there is a significant cost advantage in using EcoPaXX instead of aluminum. The total system cost can be up to 25% less than that for a similar die-cast aluminum crankshaft cover design. This is the first time that EcoPaXX has been used in a powertrain component.

The material had to meet a series of very demanding specifications, including very low water absorption for dimensional stability; high resistance to stress over a wide range of temperatures (operating temperatures range from -40°C to +150 °C, with excursions up to 170°C); resistance to engine oils and diesel fuel; and the ability to bond, not only to the LSR and PTFE seals, but also, during engine assembly, to the cast iron engine block and to a second silicone seal on the oil sump.

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