Access the most recent editions of Nonwovens Industry magazing featuring timely analysis and industry-leading reporting.
Read our interactive digital magazine, complete with enhanced multimedia and user-friendly navigation.
For more than 60 years, Nonwovens Industry has been your trusted source for global coverage of the household and personal products industry.
Subscribe to receive the latest news and insights from Nonwovens Industry magazine in print or digital formats.
Promote your brand to decision-makers across the global nonwovens supply chain through targeted advertising opportunities.
View our standards for content submissions, including formatting and editorial best practices.
Learn how we protect and manage your personal data.
Review the terms governing your access to and use of the Nonwovens Industry website.
Updates on company earnings, mergers, and acquisitions.
Announcements and innovations from material and equipment suppliers.
Product launches and technology rollouts in nonwovens.
General industry news covering manufacturing, sustainability, and market trends.
Executive moves, promotions, and leadership changes.
Spotlight features on emerging or noteworthy companies.
Key patent filings and innovations in the nonwovens space.
Expert perspectives on major trends and market shifts.
Dive into in-depth reports on global industry drivers, application areas, and breakthrough technologies.
Recurring editorial columns covering regulatory updates, sustainability, and commercial strategy.
Access original articles and interviews offering unique insights into business strategy, innovation, and market direction.
Industry leaders and analysts share their views on evolving challenges and opportunities in nonwovens.
Visual roundups from events, product showcases, and industry highlights.
Insight into thermal bonding via heated air for loft and softness.
Coverage on short-fiber web formation technologies.
Deep dives into continuous filament technologies and layered structures.
Mechanically bonded web technologies for durable fabrics.
Hydroentanglement processes for high-performance nonwovens.
Paper-like nonwovens formed through slurry and fiber suspension systems.
Profiles and rankings of the world’s leading nonwovens producers and brands.
Search materials, machinery, and services across the supply chain.
Discover nonwoven-based hygiene product brands.
Explore companies behind major hygiene product lines.
Submit your company for inclusion in our directories.
Learn more about leading nonwovens companies and their capabilities.
Find definitions of key industry terms and technologies.
In-depth interviews, product demos, and event highlights.
Short-form video interviews offering quick updates and takeaways.
Comprehensive publications on specialized topics in nonwovens.
Company-driven insights, case studies, and thought leadership presented in collaboration with Nonwovens Industry.
Stay up to date with official announcements from companies in the sector.
Listings of top global industry gatherings.
On-site reporting from major exhibitions.
Virtual sessions covering key technologies, market updates, and expert discussions.
What are you searching for?
Developments offer higher speeds, lower weights.
April 13, 2011
By: Karen McIntyre
Editor
At INDEX, Reicofil from the Reifenhauser Gruppe unveiled Reicofil RF 4 state-of- the-art technology. “Our technology has the potential in regard to speed, throughput, and lower fabric weight. With Our technology we can deliver the required product properties to its lowest cost with material and energy,” said the company’s service sales manager Jorg Linden. In other news, Reifenhäuser Reicofil offers customized combined heat and power plants (CHP) for new and existing Recofil spunbonding and composite lines that enable a new generation of electric power and an optimal use of the resulting waste heat, depending on the configuration of the lines. The new energy concept was presented by Reicfoil at INDEX 2011. Under optimal conditions, customized combined heat and power plants can achieve an overall efficiency of over 90%, far more than common central power stations.Producers disposing of their own CHP are able to produce part of the required electricity and at the same time they can utilise the waste heat in a targeted way on different temperature levels. For example, high temperatures can be used to generate hot compressed air for the melt blown process or for heating calenders and driers, while low temperature levels are suitable for pre-heating of process air or secondary air or for space heating. In combination with an absorption refrigerator, they are even appropriate for process air cooling and air conditioning of buildings. According to Hans-Georg Geus, technical director of Reicofil, combined heat and power plants offer essential advantages: “The targeted utilisation of waste heat resulting from a combined generation of heat and power enables the users of such plants to reduce their production costs while at the same time their production will become more sustainable and resource conserving.”
Enter the destination URL
Or link to existing content
Enter your account email.
A verification code was sent to your email, Enter the 6-digit code sent to your mail.
Didn't get the code? Check your spam folder or resend code
Set a new password for signing in and accessing your data.
Your Password has been Updated !