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March 2014

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Advances in Simulation and Materials Information Management



Using highly focalized lasers for layer-wise manufacturing. (Image courtesy of MicroLS GmbH.)

An experimental additive manufactured aerospace part in Ti-6-4 titanium. (Image courtesy of Professor Stewart Williams, Cranfield University.)

Using a web browser to interact with information held within a GRANTA MI datasheet.

Granta Design has announced details of its latest advances in simulation and materials information management to help additive manufacturers improve research, design, testing and simulation. These developments are the result of Granta's involvement in two European Framework Seven projects (NANOMICRO and AMAZE) focused on the field of additive manufacturing.

"Additive manufacturing is an area in which the use of simulation and increased experimental automation requires effective management of large quantities of materials information," said a company spokesperson. "Factors such as the need to accurately capture complex processing histories make this a challenge. Granta technology can help to meet this challenge, and has been validated and extended through involvement in these projects."

In the four-year project, 10 partners have been developing a layer-wise manufacturing approach using highly focalized powder/heat fluxes (with dimensions in the microns range) for metals and cermets (ceramic-metallic composites). Granta's collaboration with the University of Cambridge enabled simulation work that informed the choice of build parameters in the additive manufacturing process, leading to a shorter production development time and lower part failures. The work tested and validated the use of Granta software as a means to apply materials models and analyze their results.

Granta also partners in the ongoing project "Additive Manufacturing Aiming Towards Zero Waste & Efficient Production of High-Tech Metal Products" (AMAZE). Led by the European Space Agency, this 30 partner project seeks to rapidly produce large defect-free additively manufactured metallic components up to 2 meters in size for use in aeronautics, space, nuclear fusion, automotive and tooling. Granta is helping project partners manage the materials, processing and test information for analysis and simulation, tailored specifically for additive manufacturing, as AMAZE seeks to achieve 50% reduction in power, consumables, raw materials, machining and cost for finished parts, compared to traditional processing.

Granta's involvement has fed directly into the ongoing development of its materials information management software, GRANTA MI Version 7 that was recently launched. The AMAZE project has supported the enhancement of features that enable widely dispersed collaborators to upload and share complex materials data. It is also validating the capabilities of the system in capturing large volumes of highly complex data from multiple partner organizations and linking these together to make the full body of data securely searchable and analyzable.

"Involvement in these collaborative projects has reinforced the importance of an advanced materials information management system," said Dr. James Goddin, Collaborative Program Manager at Granta Design. "Within a collaborative setting as well as within individual organizations, as project partners contribute to and access the data they need, with appropriate management of IP, we are seeing faster, better results from testing programs. This helps to save time and develop new materials knowledge. It also capitalizes on the extensive data that is already being generated in this area, avoiding duplication of effort and establishing a better understanding of some of the more complex variables."

For more information contact:

Granta Design

ASM International

9639 Kinsman Road

Materials Park, OH 44073-0002

800-241-1546

www.grantadesign.com

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