| Exaltec- a company jointly formed in 1998 by Bayer and GE (two largest manufacturers of Polycarbonate) to mainly develop a special coating to provide scratch resistance to Polycarbonate (PC) sheet so that it can be used for glazing of automobile, has finally seen the end of the tunnel. In June 2005, The U.S. Dept. of Transportation's National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) approved the Exaltec 900 material and coating system for all non-windshield glazing, provided that it meets all existing auto glazing specifications for laminated glass. NHTSA determined that no new regulations were necessary, PC glazing can be validated using existing specifications for laminated glass.  Polycarbonate has dominated the 
                                market for vehicle headlamp covers for 15 years 
                                and n ews from the auto industry is quite positive 
                                that Polycarbonate sheets will find application 
                                in automobile glazing shortly. PC glazing is being 
                                moulded into larger parts offering considerable 
                                weight saving and offer styling and design potential 
                                (distinctive 3D shapes) that glass cannot match. 
                                This emerging market holds good potential, but 
                                will be challenging as Polycarbonate (PC) car 
                                windows require specialized machinery, high-end 
                                processing capability, premium polymers, advanced 
                                coating technologies and innovative mould and 
                                runner designs. Glass auto windows are produced 
                                up to 1.5 or even 2 m 2 
                                . With the latest technology, PC auto glazing 
                                can be molded up to 1.4 m 2 
                                (around 15 ft 2 ), although 
                                some believe sizes up to 2 m 2 
                                (21.5 ft 2 ) are expected 
                                very soon. Larger auto glazing can deliver weight 
                                savings up to 50% versus glass. Unlike glass, PC glazing can have integral ribs 
                                or brackets to lock the parts onto the vehicle 
                                or support another feature. PC auto-glazing will 
                                also introduce design concepts such as a side 
                                window with the rear-view mirror mounted on it 
                                rather than on the door panel, vehicle roofs that 
                                wrap onto the rear of the vehicle, and moulded 
                                heating/defrosting elements and radio antennas 
                                into a PC window panel with in-mould films that 
                                have preprinted circuitry.
 Recent developments in scratch-resistant coating 
                                systems have significantly broadened the PC glazing 
                                market in the U.S. Until last June, PC was limited 
                                in the U.S. to non-passenger areas of the vehicle, 
                                typically in back cargo areas of SUVs, though 
                                there are no such applications yet in the U.S. 
                                Regulations are less stringent in Europe and Asia.
 Manufacturing of PC auto-glazing requires a special set of manufacturing techniques that go beyond the conventional in machinery, moulds, materials, and processing methods. First, the new auto glazing parts are large - 
                                up to 1.4 m2 (around 15 
                                ft2)�and they must to be 
                                moulded under low-stress conditions for optical 
                                quality and for retention of a hard coat. Residual 
                                stresses in the part negatively influence optical 
                                quality. High stress in the part can lead to haze 
                                or delamination of the coating. Injection-compression 
                                rather than conventional injection molding is 
                                the ideal process for making large parts with 
                                low stress. Machinery suppliers such as Battenfeld, 
                                Engel and Krauss Maffei have developed injection-compression 
                                processes to meet these low-pressure, low-stress 
                                requirements. Because large glazing panels are 
                                essentially thin-wall parts and must have parallel 
                                surfaces for good optical qualities, moulding 
                                machines must be able to maintain close parallelism 
                                of platens and molds�within 0.1 mm.
 New tooling concepts have been developed by European firms and hot-runner designs have also affected by the new moulding criteria.
 New PC materials had to be developed for good flow, higher optical clarity than conventional materials, and adhesion to a hard coat. Bayer MaterialScience and GE each developed advanced PC resins with part thickness averages 4 to 5 mm, and the flow-length to thickness ratio is around 300:1.
 Simutaneously, advances were imperative in post-mould coating technology to deliver high resistance to abrasion, scratching and UV exposure/ weathering, as well as good light transmission and anti-reflective properties. This led to proprietary �wet-coat� formulations as well as a new wet-coat/plasma-coating technique.
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