Technical Absorbents
Techtextil Frankfurt

Free membership

Receive our weekly Newsletter
and set tailored daily news alerts.

Testing/​Standards

Kraig Biocraft expands materials performance testing procedures

With this new expanded testing, the company has already identified variances in material properties for its transgenic silkworm lines.

2nd February 2018

Innovation in Textiles
 |  Ann Arbor, MI

Protective

In response to this new discovery, the company has implemented an intensive selective breeding programme to leverage the results of the newly established testing procedure. The company has also begun a cross breeding project to reinvigorate its transgenic lines with commercial silk genetics.

Combined, the expanded testing and selective breeding efforts are designed to allow Kraig Biocraft Laboratories to more tightly control silk properties, while at the same time, creating the necessary genetic diversity within each line.

More opportunities

The increased throughput and capacity for material testing, enabled by the company’s new facilities and new testing protocol, is expected to identify even more opportunities for material and process improvements over the coming quarters. The company intends to use these discoveries to improve its operations and its products.

“The expanded capacity for testing, which resulted from our decision to insource a major portion of our research operations, has already proven its significant value to the Company,” said Jon Rice, COO. “The results from performance testing, under the new testing protocol, have already been translated into an action plan. The ability to quickly translate those results into an action plan is a great example of the value in consolidating our research and production into a single facility.”

Future plans

“The efforts already underway to improve our testing and selective breeding should result in an improved process and more uniform final product,” added Mr Rice.

“Our plan is to improve quality back to our target range before spooling up for mass production. This could cause a delay in commercialisation if the other parts of our commercialisation plan fall into place earlier. Uniform materials, improved quality control, and minimising the performance variance will play an important part in our work to commercialise spider silk. The information gained from this program will continue to inform our drive for continuous improvement.”

www.kraiglabs.com

Latest Reports

Business intelligence for the fibre, textiles and apparel industries: technologies, innovations, markets, investments, trade policy, sourcing, strategy...

Find out more