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Manufacturing Technology Insights | Tuesday, August 17, 2021
This follow-up project will be used to build on a previous NETL grant the company won, which focused on coal core composites for low-cost, lightweight, fire-resistant panels and roofing materials.
FREMONT, CA: X-MAT, the Advanced Materials Division of Semplastics, has been awarded a 1.5 million dollars grant from the Department of Energy’s National Energy Technology Laboratory (NETL) to continue researching and developing its coal roof tile X-TILE.
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This follow-up project will be used to build on a previous NETL grant the company won, which focused on coal core composites for low-cost, lightweight, fire-resistant panels and roofing materials.
This grant will help advance this technology closer to commercialization by funding the construction of a pilot manufacturing line in Bluefield, West Virginia, and developing routes for providing tiles in various colors, coatings, and textures. X-MAT has received a total of 3 million dollars to support its work with coal roof tiles. “The X-TILE is coal reimagined,” said Bill Easter, founder of X-MAT and Semplastics. “We are honored to receive this follow-on grant from the DOE to continue the revolutionary work our team is accomplishing.”
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The X-TILE is a thin, fire-resistant tile that can endure severe temperatures. This coal-derived roof tile is not only more durable than its traditional equivalents, but it is also more environmentally friendly.
Semplastics and X-MAT have received approximately 6 million dollars in grants and contracts from the NETL. In addition to the follow-on grant and the original grant for the X-TILE, the company was awarded a 1.4 million dollars contract to develop new uses for coal waste, a nearly 1 million dollars contract to fund research into coal-derived battery materials, and a 625,000 dollars contract from the NETL to develop coal-derived building materials.
X-MAT is currently working on other coal-derived construction materials, in addition to its coal roof tiles, to construct a home almost entirely out of coal-derived building materials. Soon, the company will be able to use coal to make structural columns, facades, bricks, roof tiles, and various other building components. These coal-derived building materials are fire-resistant, non-toxic, lightweight, and long-lasting, making them safer and easier to use than their traditional counterparts. The business plans to complete a partial coal house by 2023.
See Also: Energy Business Review
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