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Plastics enable winning automotive concepts

A Sabic Innovative Plastics product story
Edited by the Engineeringtalk editorial team Mar 6, 2008

Award attests to the effectiveness of Sabic Innovative Plastics' strategy of working side-by-side with customers to help them deliver business success.

The Hyundai QarmaQ advanced technology demonstration vehicle (ATDV) has been selected as a winner of the International Forum (iF) Product Design Awards 2008 for Advanced Studies, which honours experimental drafts of products and studies that have not yet been implemented.

Hyundai Motor Europe and Sabic Innovative Plastics, co-developers of the QarmaQ, jointly won the award, which was presented this week at the Hanover, Germany Exhibition Grounds.

For 54 years, the iF design award has served as an internationally recognised trademark for outstanding design.

This award attests to the effectiveness of Sabic Innovative Plastics' strategy of working side-by-side with customers to help them deliver business success.

Key criteria for selecting the QarmaQ ATDV included design quality, choice of materials, degree of innovation, environmental compatibility, functionality and safety.

For example, the concept of the "elastic front" safety system featured on the QarmaQ can help reduce the risk of severe injuries in CUV pedestrian collisions.

Design innovations included panoramic wrap-around glazing using Sabic Innovative Plastics' Lexan polycarbonate resin.

Through the use of thermoplastic materials, QarmaQ designers were given greater expressive freedom to create complex three-dimensional shapes that could not have been achieved with conventional production methods or materials.

The QarmaQ was developed with three key goals in mind: to demonstrate the concept of a pedestrian friendly crossover utility vehicle (CUV) design with the "elastic front" passive pedestrian protection concept from Sabic Innovative Plastics; to enable design and styling freedom through the use of innovative plastic materials; and to create a CUV that would reduce greenhouse emissions.

Thanks to weight reduction through the use of plastics, the QarmaQ reached its environmental goals.

GreenOrder, an environmental strategy firm based in New York, that audited the QarmaQ, estimated that the 60kg that have been taken out of the QarmaQ means the vehicle would require about 80 fewer litres of diesel per year, and would cut annual greenhouse gas emissions by more than 200kg.

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