Apre l’Istitute for Advanced Composites Manufacturing Innovation


Advanced composites – such as carbon fiber – are three times as strong and twice as light as the lightest metals. Currently, they’re used for expensive applications like satellites and luxury cars.
Lowering the cost of these materials would enable their use for a broader range of products essential to America’s clean energy economy, including lightweight vehicles with record-breaking fuel economy; lighter and longer wind turbine blades; high pressure tanks for natural gas-fueled cars; and lighter, more efficient industrial equipment.

That’s why earlier this year President Obama announced a new advanced manufacturing hub: the Institute for Advanced Composites Manufacturing Innovation (IACMI) in Knoxville, Tennessee.
Yesterday I was in Knoxville to help officially kick off the Institute, which will work to develop lower-cost, higher-speed and more efficient manufacturing and recycling processes for advanced composites.

The Institute will focus on lowering the overall manufacturing costs of advanced composites by 50 percent, reducing the energy used to make composites by 75 percent and increasing the recyclability of composites to more than 95 percent within the next decade. This was the first meeting of the Institute’s 123 world-class partners – companies, nonprofits and universities – led by a new not-for-profit organization established by the University of Tennessee, Knoxville.

Since February 2010, the U.S. has added 800,000 new manufacturing jobs. And yesterday’s launch is exactly the kind of investment we need to build on this progress, creating the foundation needed for American manufacturing growth and competitiveness in the years to come. The Institute has assembled a team of organizations from across multiple industries, including leading manufacturers, material suppliers and software developers, government and academia. These partners have broad and deep experience in all aspects of the advanced composite product development process from design and prototyping, to manufacturing at commercial scale.

The new institute pairs leading carbon fiber producers and suppliers – like Materials Innovation Technologies, Harper International and Strongwell – with key manufacturers like TPI Composites for wind turbines and Ford for automobiles. The combined resources and expertise of the team will provide a leap forward in composite manufacturing and further enhance U.S. competitiveness in clean energy as new partners are brought on board.

IACMI brings together researchers and provides its members access to existing resources like the Manufacturing Demonstration Facility at Oak Ridge National Laboratory in Tennessee, unique fiber labs in Kentucky, the Composite Vehicle Research Center in Michigan, large-scale wind testing facilities in Colorado, equipment at the National Composite Center in Ohio, and a modeling and simulation platform from Purdue University.
The Institute plans to expand these shared-access R&D capabilities at a scale that does not yet exist in the U.S. for composites manufacturing.

The Institute is already producing results – with Ford and DowAksa announcing a joint development agreement in April to advance research on cost-effective, high-volume manufacturing of automotive-grade carbon fiber in conjunction with IACMI. IACMI is sparking additional investment in composites research by Purdue University, which recently announced plans for a new building for manufacturing research that will house IACMI resources alongside other research groups.

As President Obama said when he was in Tennessee to announce this hub, “…places like this are who we are. We create. We innovate. We build. We do it together.” By taking steps to support advanced manufacturing, the Energy Department continues to build on this momentum and enable the United States to create, innovate and lead the global clean energy manufacturing race.

 


Leggi anche

In occasione dell’evento JEC Forum ITALY – organizzato da JEC Group in collaborazione con Assocompositi – del prossimo 6-7 giugno 2023 a Bologna, HP Composites terrà un intervento all’interno della sessione “Sostenibilita’ e circolarita’ dei materiali compositi”. Disponibile ora l’abstract dello speech….

Leggi tutto…

Grazie alle loro proprietà tecniche e al peso ridotto, i compositi vengono impiegati in quasi tutti i settori industriali e la plastica rinforzata con fibra di vetro (GFRP) costituisce la maggior parte di questo mercato. La necessità di sviluppare un processo economico per il riciclaggio dei rifiuti contenenti fibre pregiate ha spinto Longworth a lanciare EMPHASIZING, un programma di ricerca, finanziato da Innovate UK, che esplora la circolarità dei compositi in fibra di vetro….

Leggi tutto…

L’ossatura dei moduli di servizio dei satelliti realizzati nell’impianto di Torino di Thales Alenia Space richiede spesso l’impiego di strutture in materiali compositi che devono essere tagliati con estrema precisione. Qui entra in gioco Zund che ha fornito a Thales Alenia Space un sistema di taglio digitale automatico e altamente produttivo, in grado di lavorare un’ampia varietà di materiali, tra i quali spiccano i compositi…

Leggi tutto…

Il Ministero Federale per gli affari economici e l’azione per il clima, nell’ambito del programma “Rafforzare le dinamiche di trasformazione energetica nella regione del carbone e nelle località delle centrali elettriche”, ha stanziato quasi sei milioni di euro per sostenere l’Università tecnologica di Chemnitz nella creazione e nell’espansione della Carbon LabFactory, un’infrastruttura di ricerca per le fibre di carbonio ecologiche. …

Leggi tutto…

L’intelligenza artificiale dà vita ad un processo di produzione di compositi basato su un approccio digital twin, che sfrutta l’apprendimento automatico (ML) dato dai big data per elaborare un gemello digitale da utilizzare nel processo di produzione delle lame. Questo framework ML è in grado di fornire un riscontro in tempo reale, riducendo il rischio di difetti e azzerando i costi di produzione dei prototipi fisici. …

Leggi tutto…