Thermally-Conductive Thermoplastics to Grow Substantially
Research and Markets' new study analyzes this market by type of plastic, end-use market, and global region.
Dublin-based (U.S. office in NYC) has released its new study, “Thermally Conductive Plastics Market – Global Trends and Forecast to 2020”, which signals significant growth within the next five years. The overall market size for thermally conductive plastics is estimated to grow from $388.5 million in 2015 to $757.4 million by 2020, at a CAGR (compounded annual growth rate) of 14.3%.
The market growth for thermally conductive plastics is driven by the cost-effective and lightweight alternative they present to challenge materials such as ceramics and metals. Other major drivers include ease-of-handling, customization, moldability, higher scratch resistance, thermal stability, impact strength, and resistance to abrasion. The report includes analysis of the market by raw material, such as PPS, PBT, nylon, PC, PEI, and PSU; by end-use industry, such as electrical & electronics (E&E), automotive, industrial, healthcare, and aerospace; and by region, namely, North America, Europe, Asia-Pacific, and RoW. Some key elements identified include:
• The E&E market is the largest end-use industry in terms of volume, followed by automotive, industrial, and healthcare.
• Among all the end-use industries, healthcare is estimated to register the highest CAGR between 2015 and 2020.
• In 2015, North America accounted for the largest market share, in terms of volume, and is estimated to remain the market leader within the next five years.
• The U.S. led the demand for thermally-conductive plastics due to increased demand for LED lighting in the last two-to-three years.
The researchers used both top-down and bottom-up approaches to estimate and validate the size of the global market and to estimate the size of the various other dependent submarkets in the overall thermally conductive plastics market. Moreover, this study involved the use of extensive secondary sources, directories, and databases such as Hoovers, Bloomberg, Chemical Week, Factiva, The Plastics Industry Trade Associations (PITA), Society of the Plastics Industry (SPI), The British Plastics Federation (BPF) European Plastics Recycling and Recovery Organizations (EPRO), National Insulation Association (NIA), International Plastics Association (IPA), and other government and private websites.
Extensive primary interviews were conducted with the following break-down:
• By Company Type: Tier 1, 37% -- Tier 2, 50% -- Others, 13%
• By Designation: C level, 50% -- Director level, 31% -- Others,
19%
• By Region: North America, 38% -- Europe, 36% -- Asia-Pacific,
25% -- RoW, 6%
The key companies profiled in this report are: BASF, Covestro, Saint Gobain, Toray Industries, DSM, HELLA KGaA Hueck & Co., RTP Co., Celanese, PolyOne, Kaneka, and Mitsubishi Engineering-Plastics.
Search for nearly 100,000 grades of polymers on the Universal Selector by clicking here
Related Content
-
Polymer Science for Those Who Work With Plastics: Why Entanglements — Not Just Molecular Weight — Drive Plastic Performance
Ever try running your fingers through tangled hair? Yeah … that’s not fun, but that’s what happens at the molecular level when polymer chains reach the right length. They wrap around each other, intertwine and … get stuck — and those tangles are the real reason plastics perform the way they do.
-
Polymer Science for Those Who Work With Plastics: Molecular Weight — What It Is and Why It Matters
Molecular weight might seem like an abstract concept, but it plays a crucial role in determining the behavior of plastics during processing and in their final applications.
-
Prices Up for PE, ABS, PC, Nylons 6 and 66; Down for PP, PET and Flat for PS and PVC
Second quarter started with price hikes in PE and the four volume engineering resins, but relatively stable pricing was largely expected by the quarter’s end.