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COOKEVILLE, Tenn. (March 15, 2004) -- Groundbreaking partnerships established
by Tennessee Tech University stand ready to change the face of metal casting,
an industry that supplies engineered components or castings for 90 percent
of all manufactured goods and equipment in the United States.
With recent funding of a $3.24 million project by the U.S. Department
of Energy, Tennessee Techs Center for Manufacturing Research is
stepping in to support an industry that supplies the country with motor
vehicle parts, engine blocks, pipes, industrial machinery and other products
vital to the U.S. economy and national security.
TTU, in conjunction with The Oak Ridge National Laboratory and Walford
Technologies Inc. as primary partners, is leading a team including nine
private companies to solve challenges within the metal casting industry
that inhibit efficiency and cost effectiveness.
Currently, the U.S. metal casting industry is losing jobs, and
our approach to help curb this trend is to improve processes so that quality
is increased, costs are lowered, and new products are developed to create
new markets for the industry, said CMR Director Ken Currie.
Targeted development drives the team, which includes members from Oak
Ridge National Laboratory and several private companies, to improve the
metal casting process, said Graham Walford, a project partner whose company
Walford Technologies Inc. in Oak Ridge specializes in the measurement
of products during the production process.
As individual groups we have limited resources, but in true partnership
where we all share the result, we have everything we need for success,
said Walford.
The current challenge is to take measurements of the metal casting process
at various stages in order to detect flaws or the potential for errors.
Until now, the metal casting process, most often pouring molten
iron into sand castings, could only be evaluated by the end product,
said Mohamed Abdelrahman, a TTU associate professor of electrical and
computer engineering who heads the project.
There were no tools or methods to take intermediate measurements
such as the soundness and size of the sand casting or flaws in
the filling process until we began working on sensor technologies
that provide real-time data.
Walford said no company, university or government agency uniquely has
the resource or capability to create the whole solution.
The unique instrumentation and its associated technology needed
for our project is available in The Oak Ridge National Laboratory but
is likely too expensive for most universities, he said. However,
project use of this resource fits well with the industrial team to validate
practical and cost effective measurement solutions for process improvement
and control.
A company such as Walford Technologies Inc., which brings end user experience
and expertise in non-invasive measuring procedures (X-ray, optical, laser
scanning, sonic, electric field perturbation) to the project, can offer
those technologies in return for the benefits received from the partnership.
The CMR is remarkably flexible and dynamic when it comes to this
type of research, said Walford. This complements the partner
organizations that may have production and other demands on their resources
yet must make product improvement. At TTU we can tailor testing to meet
our respective needs and take advantage of the creativity of students.
The pervading atmosphere at Tennessee Tech is We can get
things done, he said. With that attitude, a live foundry
and good students and people to spare, TTU can be responsive to the needs
of the industry.
Adelrahman says the CMR benefits from both the expertise and resources
of companies and government agencies while playing a role only the university
can provide.
What we bring to the table is a multidisciplinary approach to the
research, said Abdelrahman. To reach our broad goals as a
team, we must understand the thermal, mechanical and chemical properties
of patterns and molds. The Center offers the collaborative talents of
mechanical, chemical and electrical engineers to solve problems.
Currie, Walford and Abdelrahman agree that that the ultimate success of
the partnerships will result in opening new markets, thus allowing U.S.
companies to stem the tide of metal casting jobs being lost to other countries.
When we truly understand how to create a defect-free product, we
can create more complex shapes, said Walford. With the ability
to increase the complexity, we can produce products that are lighter and
stronger. This can lead to new markets for light-weight components that
are cost effective and energy efficient.
Answering that call is what TTU hopes to accomplish in the next three
years.
If we can create different levels of castings that are high-quality
and cost-effective, we can make a difference in the future of the metal
casting industry, said Currie.
--Karen Lykins
This information posted 15 March 2004
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