SAMULET; Project 4: Project 4.3.1: UFG Ti-6Al-4V for Low Temperature/High Productivity DB/SPF and Project 4.3.2: Hot-Die Forging of Titanium Alloys
Lead Research Organisation:
University of Manchester
Department Name: Mechanical Aerospace and Civil Eng
Abstract
Several process options for the manufacture of components are beset with either quality or economic deficiencies. For example, the cleanliness of surfaces of aerospace components is critical to the production of sound welds using electron-beam welding technology; deficient cleaning methods would result in defective welds. Again, the conversion of Titanium alloys into aerospace components is currently attended to at temperatures at which tool-materials deteriorate rapidly, incurring a prohibitively high tool cost. Converting aerospace materials at high-temperatures would also require specialised tool-materials that are more expensive to cut and capital expenditure that is, typically, four times greater. Current practice is to shoehorn the controlling parameters to enable the manufacture of components. Continuation in this manner is unacceptable from an economic viewpoint. Considering that component designers need to be sufficiently conversant with the geometrical, functional and manufacturing constraints while evolving the form of the component, it follows that new processes, regardless of whether these relate to surface preparation (cleaning), processing at elevated temperatures or to machining to reduce further surface finishing requirements, may only be adopted efficiently, after the critical controlling parameters have been quantified. Project 4: Novel and Transformed Processes, attends to the quantification of the key controlling parameters. Research in the group of novel and transformed processes is with a view to acquiring the know-how to enable the design of components and the associated processes along the value-adding chain. This group refers to the laser cleaning of aerospace materials and components for subsequent processing, since it is known that several defects arise from the failure to meet quality standards. Two aspects of Project 4 refer to the high-temperature conversion of materials into aerospace components. The first of these refers to a new means of manufacturing components at low temperature by introducing a new form of raw material - this ultra-fine-grained variant enables the operation of the conventional processes (diffusion bonding and super-plastic forming) at significantly reduced temperatures, resulting in reduced manufacturing cost. This fine-grained variant will be manufactured and subjected to component forming exercises to demonstrate the new economic balance in manufacturing aerospace components. The second process is hot-die forging of aerospace components. The current practice of bashing Titanium alloys at very high temperatures into a rough form and then whittle away to arrive at the final form is recognised as being expensive. The need to bash the material arises from the fact that the work-material cools too rapidly to operate at the lower forging speeds that can be attended to in presses of lower capital expenditure. If one were to operate at lower temperatures, smaller presses may be used but this balance between bashing the metal at high temperatures and squeezing the work-material at lower temperatures has yet to be defined. The proposed research will define the parameters critical to operating at lower temperatures. The final project refers to an elegant approach to removing the excess materials remaining on components in a manner that reduces the amount of additional downstream processing of surfaces to meet performance standards. By quantifying the character of the cutting tool and the machine on which excess material is removed, the technology will enable the operation of the metal-removal system in a manner that recognises the fact that the character of both, the cutting tool and the machine-tool influence the cut surfaces. Each separate process will assume a role in more cost-effective conversion of raw materials for the aerospace industrial sector and would also impact on the nuclear and automotive industrial sectors.
Publications

Marimuthu S
(2013)
Numerical Simulation of Excimer Laser Cleaning of Film and Particle Contaminants
in Journal of Heat Transfer

Molchan I
(2013)
Effect of surface morphology changes of Ti-6Al-4V alloy modified by laser treatment on GDOES elemental depth profiles
in J. Anal. At. Spectrom.

See T
(2014)
Laser abrading of carbon fibre reinforced composite for improving paint adhesion
in Applied Physics A

See T
(2015)
Effect of geometry measurements on characteristics of femtosecond laser ablation of HR4 nickel alloy
in Optics and Lasers in Engineering

Yue L
(2012)
Material morphological characteristics in laser ablation of alpha case from titanium alloy
in Applied Surface Science

Yue L
(2013)
Modeling and simulation of laser cleaning of tapered micro-slots with different temporal pulses
in Optics & Laser Technology

Yue L
(2012)
Multiphysics modelling and simulation of dry laser cleaning of micro-slots with particle contaminants
in Journal of Physics D: Applied Physics
Description | 1) Laser cleaning technology for aero-engine fan blade production (passed the Rolls-Royce qualification). 2) Laser cleaning technology for diffusion bonding (BAE Aeroplane Product Manufacturing) - passed the company production quality standard. 3) Scientific knowledge on laser beam interactions with various industrial contaminants and aerospace materials, resulting in a modelling tool for laser cleaning (used by BAE Systems for product evaluation) 4) A novel in-process monitoring system for laser cleaning processed, practically used by Rolls-Royce for aero-engine production. |
Exploitation Route | 1. Industry deployments. 2. Spinout |
Sectors | Aerospace, Defence and Marine |
Description | The in-process monitoring system developed in the project has been deployed by Rolls-Royce for aero-engine manufacture during laser cleaning. The in-proces monitoring technique developed in the project has been deployed by Rolls-Royce plc for aero-engine production during laser cleaning. Beneficiaries: Rolls-Royce plc Contribution Method: The project developed and demonstrated an in-process quality monitoring technique for laser cleaning in collaboration with Rolls-Royce and BAE System. The modelling tool developed in the project has been used by BAE System for the evaluation of lasers for taking up the laser cleaning technology in the company. Beneficiaries: BAE Sysems Contribution Method: The project developed a user friendly modelling tool for laser cleaning process |
First Year Of Impact | 2012 |
Sector | Aerospace, Defence and Marine |
Impact Types | Economic |
Description | Funding by BAE Sysems |
Amount | £698,625 (GBP) |
Funding ID | 93001376 |
Organisation | BAE Systems |
Sector | Academic/University |
Country | United Kingdom |
Start | 10/2009 |
End | 03/2013 |
Description | Funding by BAE Sysems |
Amount | £698,625 (GBP) |
Funding ID | 93001376 |
Organisation | BAE Systems |
Sector | Academic/University |
Country | United Kingdom |
Start | 04/2009 |
End | 12/2013 |
Description | Funding from Rolls-Royce |
Amount | £40,000 (GBP) |
Organisation | Rolls Royce Group Plc |
Sector | Private |
Country | United Kingdom |
Start | 07/2014 |
End | 11/2011 |
Description | Funding from Rolls-Royce |
Amount | £12,000 (GBP) |
Funding ID | SAMULET Project 4.1.1 |
Organisation | Rolls Royce Group Plc |
Sector | Private |
Country | United Kingdom |
Start | 01/2010 |
End | 12/2011 |
Description | Funding from TSB |
Amount | £587,110 (GBP) |
Funding ID | TP-AB265C/4 |
Organisation | Innovate UK |
Sector | Public |
Country | United Kingdom |
Start | 04/2009 |
End | 03/2013 |
Description | BAE Systems |
Organisation | BAE Systems |
Country | United Kingdom |
Sector | Academic/University |
PI Contribution | Advanced laser technologies for aerospace manufacturing |
Collaborator Contribution | Application specification and certification of university developed technologies to industrial standards. |
Impact | Rolls-Royce is also a partner. |
Start Year | 2009 |
Description | Rolls-Royce plc |
Organisation | Rolls Royce Group Plc |
Country | United Kingdom |
Sector | Private |
Start Year | 2006 |
Company Name | Advanced Laser Technology Ltd. |
Description | The company design, manufacture and sell laser cladding, laser cleaning and laser based 3D metal printing systems worldwide. |
Year Established | 2012 |
Impact | The company currently employs 19 full time staff with 12 staff having PhD degrees and every employee has a university degree. The company turnover is between £1m to £2m. |
Website | http://www.altlaser.co.uk |
Description | Desemination |
Form Of Engagement Activity | A magazine, newsletter or online publication |
Part Of Official Scheme? | Yes |
Geographic Reach | International |
Primary Audience | Professional Practitioners |
Results and Impact | A pulication in Public Service Review: UK Science & Technology, Issue 2: Laser cleaning of industrial components. More interests from potential students to study at The University of Manchester. |
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2011 |