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Contact:
Michael Zapata III,
919/696-7814
Greg Thomas,
News Services, 919/515-3470
Jan.
13, 2005 Start-up
Company Aims to Revolutionize Textile Dyeing
FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
HueMetrix,
a start-up company based on 15 years of research
at North Carolina State University’s
College of Textiles, is poised to potentially revolutionize
textile dyeing – saving time, money and perhaps
even jobs – by creating a device that monitors
the dyeing process in real time.
The new system will enable textile companies to further
improve the quality and consistency of their products,
reduce manufacturing costs, decrease time to market
and help make their processes more environmentally
friendly.
In the traditional
textile dyeing process, variables like time and temperature
can be adjusted before fabric
is dyed, but until now there hasn’t been a way
to accurately monitor the process in real time and
thus no way to make any needed adjustments while fibers
are being dyed. If the product doesn’t come out
of the dye bath with the correct color shade, it must
be either redone or discarded, costing both time and
money.
“One of the biggest economic losses in textiles
is when you dye fabric and it doesn’t come out
the right color and it has to be corrected. Environmentally
it’s expensive, it makes the materials more expensive
and it costs you time, which is a big factor in getting
to market,” said Dr. Brent Smith, HueMetrix co-founder
and Cone Mills Professor of Textile Chemistry at NC
State.
The new
system works by “reading” how
much color remains in the dye bath, says Dr. Keith
Beck, a HueMetrix co-founder, member of the company’s
board of directors, and a professor and department
head of textile engineering, chemistry & science
at NC State. “You have to be able to sense what’s
going on with the dyes that are used in the process.
That information is then fed forward to the controller
where adjustments are made if needed,” Beck said.
Once
a minute, the dye bath is measured to determine how
much dye is left in the bath. That indicates how
much dye has moved to the fabric. According to Smith
and Beck, real-time monitoring has been attempted for
a long time, but the difficulty is in making it work
accurately and
consistently.
Dr. Warren
Jasper, another co-founder of HueMetrix and professor
of textile engineering, chemistry & science
at NC State, worked on many of the system’s software
elements. “We have predictive computer models
in the system, so we know when we make a change how
it’s going to affect the process,” he said.
Two prototypes
of HueMetrix’s machine are currently
in use. Right now the company is working on engineering
development – building a non-prototype, bulletproof
system that will survive the rigors of daily textile-plant
use. Marketable systems are expected to be ready in
12 to 24 months.
In a state that has recently lost thousands of textile
jobs, the founders of HueMetrix hope their products
can turn that trend around by making dyeing plants
more efficient and cost effective. That could translate
into saved jobs and new jobs.
According
to Beck, the College of Textiles is directly focused
on applications. “We are working on high-tech
discoveries as well as high-tech solutions to existing
market problems. This is dual-use technology that not
only can give increased competitiveness to American
companies – perhaps save American jobs – but
that may also lead to new product opportunities even
beyond textiles,” he said.
With licensing
support and assistance from NC State’s
Office of Technology Transfer, the research faculty
who developed the real-time dye monitoring system were
assisted by the High Technology Entrepreneurship and
Commercialization (HiTEC) center located within NC
State’s College of Management. HiTEC educates
business and technical graduate students and faculty
in entrepreneurship and innovation so that they understand
how to turn technologies into successful businesses.
The center’s efforts have helped raise about
$120 million for clients and new ventures since 1995.
HueMetrix co-founders worked with technology transfer
professionals, graduate students, successful local
entrepreneurs, venture attorneys and venture accountants
to evaluate the commercial viability of their research,
license the intellectual property and form a company.
Company leaders are now fine-tuning the business plan,
attracting the remaining management team, and determining
product development schedules.
“The folks in the HiTEC Program at NC State
know how to bring technology to market. This start-up
is just another example of their successes,” said
Michael Zapata, HueMetrix chairman and entrepreneur-in-residence
at NC State. “HueMetrix is an excellent example
of how the College of Textiles at NC State has used
cutting-edge technology to develop new products that
provide manufacturers with a strong competitive advantage.”
For
more information on HueMetrix, visit the Web.
Additional information about the
HiTEC Program is available on the Web.
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