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Xtellar: Braskem Spins off 3D Printing Materials Division into New Business https://ift.tt/BREdDZu With $14 billion in revenues, Brazil’s Braskem is the largest petrochemical company in Latin America and the largest polyolefins producer in the Americas, particularly polypropylene (PP). The giant has taken some important steps in 3D printing, so far establishing an e-commerce offering and buying nylon 3D printing pioneer Taulman3D. The company has released PP, EVA and PP/PE filaments and pellets, including such novel products as a sugarcane derived 94 Shore A EVA material and FL600R, which is in part made of bottlecaps. Braskem also developed a powder bed fusion material together with ALM. In a previous interview, we learned that the company was relying on new sustainable materials, quality, and its established work in PE and PP to succeed. Now, Oxygea, Braskem´s sustainability startup accelerator, has spun out these activities into a new company, Xtellar. Xtellar is meant to bring new 3D printing filaments, pellets and powders to market. The company specifically wants to look at PETG, Polyamide, bio-based materials and recycled polymers as well as PP And PE.
As corporate ventures go, this is probably a very wise thing to do. Xteller can still rely on Braskem´s huge volume and deep R&D in materials to make its own products while it also pushes Braskem resin in the market. Meanwhile, the more agile, quick, and focused unit should be able to develop more additive manufacturing (AM) expertise and better develop the market. Some corporate attempts to enter the 3D printing market have been laughably aloof. And several ventures have put some distance between the corporate and the client. If you don’t know what is going on in the market, the issues that customers are facing, and the relevant applications, you simply will not make the right materials. You’ll also not really understand what drives the market and what base needs are in the space. Such fool-hardy attempts may make you miss the mark time and time again. What we’ve seen, as well, is that new firms without market understanding struggle to find key applications and make materials that suit them. They then resort to chasing the same few known applications that everyone else is. This is a key issue that we look at more deeply in our Tip of the Iceberg Problem post. Often major petrochemical firms are too focused on pushing their own product families and pellets without regard for if they are optimal. Another issue is that, while insanely profitable, the venture often has no meaningful impact on the bottom line for the larger firm. This can lead to a lack of attention from corporate for the venture. With all of this in mind, the Xtellar spin-off seems like a smart play. I also really like the focus on pellets, which will grow quickly as part sizes in that segment make for a lot of material being used. The number of applications in large- and medium -ormat is growing rapidly as well, so this seems like a sensible area to pay attention to. The post Xtellar: Braskem Spins off 3D Printing Materials Division into New Business appeared first on 3DPrint.com | The Voice of 3D Printing / Additive Manufacturing. Printing via 3DPrint.com | The Voice of 3D Printing / Additive Manufacturing https://ift.tt/CZKLnxG April 26, 2023 at 09:47AM
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