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"Green" Tires That Cut CO2 Emissions on the Anvil

by VR Sreeraman on Nov 24 2009 6:22 AM

A new generation of "green" automobile tires that can boost fuel efficiency without sacrificing safety and durability, and in the process, cutting carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions, is rolling their way through the research pipeline.

The new tires could help add an extra mile or two per gallon to a car's fuel economy.

Chemical and Engineering News, (C and EN) ACS' weekly newsmagazine's Senior Editor Alexander Tullo explained that rolling resistance - the friction that tires encounter when rolling - are a major factor in a vehicle's fuel economy.

It can determine up to 20 percent of fuel economy. Overcoming it accounts for 4 percent of global carbon dioxide emissions from burning fossil fuels.

For years, tire makers and their raw material suppliers have been eyeing lower rolling resistance as a way to boost fuel economy and promote a cleaner environment.

But they have been thwarted by a principle in the tire world called the "magic triangle of tire technology."

It holds that an improvement to rolling resistance has to come at the expense of wet-road grip and durability.

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That barrier is now falling, thanks to the development of new materials, including new forms of silica and nanomaterials.

These new materials include a nanogel that improves abrasion resistance, grip and rolling resistance of tires as well as a newly-developed resin that helps tires retain air longer.

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Source-ANI
SRM


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