Performing technical textiles open up new fields of application
Christina Eisenbarth from the Institute for Lightweight Design and Construction (ILEK) presented the "first adaptive high-rise", a demonstration project of the Collaborative Research Center 1244 at the University of Stuttgart. Newly developed structures and building facades are being tested on the slender 36-meter tower, which will open in October 2021. The large-scale project is looking for innovative concepts for the exterior building envelope that open up new technology and design options in the facade while maximizing the reduction of resource consumption. Textile structures play a major role here. >> Further information
In the "HydroSKIN" subproject, for example, a hydroactive building envelope is being developed and tested in practice. This universally applicable textile- and film-based façade system is used for rainwater retention and evaporative cooling. It enables a drastic reduction in climatic flood and heat risks in urban regions.
How textile technologies can be used to combine different materials in the best possible way and thus make perfect use of material properties was presented by Timo Piwonski, managing partner of Iprotex GmbH & Co. KG . Since its founding in 1999, the innovative company from Münchberg has a remarkable history of success and growth and now produces textiles for automotive, industry, sports and leisure with 350 employees at nine locations worldwide.
The performance of textile structures can be seen in various product examples that were presented in the lecture. For example Tex-Lock, a practical and at the same time stylish bicycle lock made of textile hybrids, which was developed together with a start-up from Leipzig. Or a textile marten guard made of high-strength polyester. Here, a dense fabric construction insulates cables and wires in vehicles while protecting them from marten bites. Or the European Spacemesh, a knitted mesh made of gold-coated Mopybdenum wire that has already proven its worth in space missions.