Sacrificial Binder features clean burning formula.

Press Release Summary:



Suited for electronics and ceramics manufacturing, NB-180 PPC degrades completely and uniformly into environmentally benign products, providing mechanical strength to ensure consistency, solidification, or adhesion. Amorphous, colorless thermoplastic polymer produces ash residues less than 5 ppm. Based on 3% binder use levels, residual ash levels in finished parts are less than 1 ppm. NB-180 can be produced in customized viscosities and molecular weights to meet specific requirements.



Original Press Release:



Novomer Announces First Commercial Product - Clean-Burning Binder for Advanced Industrial Applications



NB-180 Well-Suited to Demanding Manufacturing Applications in Electronics and Advanced Ceramics

ITHACA, N.Y.--Novomer Inc., a materials company pioneering a family of high-performance, biodegradable plastics, polymers and other chemicals from renewable substances, today announced its first product, NB-180, a poly(propylene carbonate) (PPC) sacrificial binder that burns cleaner, more uniformly and at lower temperatures than currently available products.

Sacrificial binders are used throughout the manufacturing process accomplishing many tasks such as providing mechanical strength to ensure uniform consistency, solidification or adhesion during manufacturing processes. Application areas are extremely broad and include advanced ceramics, microelectronics, nanotechnology, metal brazing and fuel cells.

NB-180 is an amorphous, colorless thermoplastic polymer that degrades completely and uniformly into environmentally benign products, making it superb for high performance applications. The purity and low ash residue make NB-180 an ideal sacrificial material for use in the precise assembly of micro- and nano-scale devices.

"We believe that NB-180 is the cleanest-burning binder available, and demand is very strong for these types of materials in clean-room technologies," said Fox Holt, product manager, Novomer. "As products become smaller and smaller, manufacturing processes become increasingly exact. NB-180 can help deliver the precision required in these critical operations."

NB-180 burns cleaner than competitive products. Ash residues are typically much less than five parts per million. Based on three percent binder use levels, residual ash levels in finished parts are less than one part per million. Decreasing residue levels translates to reduced defect rates and other quality issues during manufacturing.

"Novomer's NB-180 is the cleanest burning material I have ever used," said Shahyaan Desai, co-founder and CTO, Mezmeriz Inc. "There are several potential uses of the material in MEMS fabrication, particularly temporary wafer bonding, which will save both time and money through the reduction of processing steps."

NB-180 also decomposes more predictably at temperatures that are much lower than currently available products. For example, it decomposes completely in air by 250 degrees C, starting at 180 degrees C. This decomposition temperature is at least 50 degrees C below that of many binders currently in use. Complete burnout occurs by 300 degrees C in inert atmospheres such as nitrogen, argon and hydrogen.

NB-180 was developed using Novomer's patented catalyst technology, which enables the production of polymers and plastics using greenhouse gases (carbon monoxide and carbon dioxide), reducing the need for non-renewable petroleum products as feedstocks. Resulting materials are 30 to 50 percent carbon monoxide or carbon dioxide by weight, depending on the precise formulation. NB-180 is more than 40 percent by weight carbon dioxide.

Pricing

NB-180 can be produced in customized viscosities and molecular weights to meet specific solution requirements. Pricing varies based on formulation and quantity ordered and is available upon request.

About Novomer

Novomer (www.novomer.com) is a revolutionary new materials company pioneering a family of low-cost, high-performance, green plastics, polymers and other chemicals. Founded in 2004 by technology commercialization firm KensaGroup, Dr. Geoffrey Coates and Dr. Scott Allen, the company is based on pioneering catalysts developed at Cornell University. Novomer's groundbreaking technology allows carbon dioxide and other renewable materials to be cost-effectively transformed into polymers, plastics and other chemicals for a wide variety of industrial markets.

Novomer, based in Ithaca, New York, has been highlighted by the BBC, CNN, Dow Jones, Forbes, the Science Channel, the New York Times, Scientific American and WIRED.

All Topics