Openair-Plasma® in the Automotive Industry

2020年09月29日
60 min
线上
Englisch
免费

From cutting-edge sensors for all-round monitoring to superior image quality and autonomous driving features, the demands on today's displays continue to grow. This not only increases the complexity and variety, but also the challenges of producing high-quality displays at reasonable prices and adapting them to different environments.

Join our PlasmaTalk on April 16th: "All information comes together in the display - thanks to Openair-Plasma®". Find out why plasma technology has become the preferred method of surface pretreatment in display manufacturing and how it ensures reliable, repeatable and reject free production. Peter Langhof, Technical Sales Manager at Plasmatreat, will explain why plasma technology plays a crucial role in the production of displays and why alternative processes are not considered. You will also find out how the innovative, CO2 reducing and inline-capable plasma pretreatment can also be used for highly sensitive, already installed electronics and how this can significantly reduce production times. Look forward to the future of Openair-Plasma® and how it will support the next generation of technical developments.

The free PlasmaTalk is designed for research, development, and quality control personnel, as well as design engineers, process engineers, and production system operators in industrial processes. PlasmaTalk lasts 40-60 minutes and includes a Q&A session. Do you have specific questions? Please send them in advance to academy@plasmatreat.com, so we can include them in the program.

演讲人

Tim Smith

Chief Technology Officer

Tim Smith is Chief Technology Officer of Plasmatreat North America and a business executive with a technical background possessing the ability to provide sales and marketing direction, manage operations and engineering, maximize revenues by streamlining operations and optimizing work procedures. Full P&L responsibility. Able to strike a balance between internal, external, and customer needs.