
Xaar Americas Inc
Xaar Americas Inc
11 Projects, page 1 of 3
assignment_turned_in Project2016 - 2024Partners:GKN Aerospace Services Ltd, [no title available], Messier-Dowty Ltd, MAHER Limited, University of Warwick +50 partnersGKN Aerospace Services Ltd,[no title available],Messier-Dowty Ltd,MAHER Limited,University of Warwick,WEIR GROUP,Centre for Process Innovation CPI (UK),Element Six (UK) Ltd,Johnson Matthey,MESSIER-DOWTY LIMITED,University of Strathclyde,CPI,The Manufacturing Technology Centre Ltd,Seco Tools,Carl Zeiss MicroImaging GmbH,National Composites Centre,Eastman Chemical Ltd (inc),MAHER Limited,Nuclear AMRC,CPI Ltd,Diameter Ltd,Freemantechnology,University of Sheffield,University of Strathclyde,LPW Technology Ltd (UK),Element Six Ltd (UK),Johnson Matthey plc,Xaar Plc,GKN Aerospace Services Ltd,XAAR PLC,Renishaw plc (UK),NCC,Xaar Americas Inc,Diamond Microwave Devices Ltd,University of Warwick,Metalysis Ltd,LPW Technology Ltd,Eastman Chemical Ltd (inc),PHOENIX SCIENTIFIC INDUSTRIES LIMITED,MTC,Morgan Advanced Materials,Freeman Technology,Johnson Matthey Plc,Morgan Crucible,University of Sheffield,Zeiss (Carl Zeiss AG),Rolls-Royce (United Kingdom),Rolls-Royce (United Kingdom),Metalysis Ltd,Rolls-Royce Plc (UK),Morgan Advanced Materials plc (UK),RENISHAW,Weir Group PLC,Nuclear AMRC,Seco ToolsFunder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: EP/P006566/1Funder Contribution: 10,724,100 GBPManufacture Using Advanced Powder Processes - MAPP Conventional materials shaping and processing are hugely wasteful and energy intensive. Even with well-structured materials circulation strategies in place to recondition and recycle process scrap, the energy use, CO2 emitted and financial costs associated are ever more prohibitive and unacceptable. We can no longer accept the traditional paradigm of manufacturing where excess energy use and high levels of recycling / down cycling of expensive and resource intensive materials are viewed as inevitable and the norm and must move to a situation where 100% of the starting material is incorporated into engineering products with high confidence in the final critical properties. MAPP's vision is to deliver on the promise of powder-based manufacturing processes to provide low energy, low cost, and low waste high value manufacturing route and products to secure UK manufacturing productivity and growth. MAPP will deliver on the promise of advanced powder processing technologies through creation of new, connected, intelligent, cyber-physical manufacturing environments to achieve 'right first time' product manufacture. Achieving our vision and realising the potential of these technologies will enable us to meet our societal goals of reducing energy consumption, materials use, and CO2 emissions, and our economic goals of increasing productivity, rebalancing the UK's economy, and driving economic growth and wealth creation. We have developed a clear strategy with a collaborative and interdisciplinary research and innovation programme that focuses our collective efforts to deliver new understanding, actions and outcomes across the following themes: 1) Particulate science and innovation. Powders will become active and designed rather than passive elements in their processing. Control of surface state, surface chemistry, structure, bulk chemistry, morphologies and size will result in particles designed for process efficiency / reliability and product performance. Surface control will enable us to protect particles out of process and activate them within. Understanding the influence between particle attributes and processing will widen the limited palette of materials for both current and future manufacturing platforms. 2) Integrated process monitoring, modelling and control technologies. New approaches to powder processing will allow us to handle the inherent variability of particulates and their stochastic behaviours. Insights from advanced in-situ characterisation will enable the development of new monitoring technologies that assure quality, and coupled to modelling approaches allow optimisation and control. Data streaming and processing for adaptive and predictive real-time control will be integral in future manufacturing platforms increasing productivity and confidence. 3) Sustainable and future manufacturing technologies. Our approach will deliver certainty and integrity with final products at net or near net shape with reduced scrap, lower energy use, and lower CO2 emissions. Recoupling the materials science with the manufacturing science will allow us to realise the potential of current technologies and develop new home-grown manufacturing processes, to secure the prosperity of UK industry. MAPP's focused and collaborative research agenda covers emerging powder based manufacturing technologies: spark plasma sintering (SPS), freeze casting, inkjet printing, layer-by-layer manufacture, hot isostatic pressing (HIP), and laser, electron beam, and indirect additive manufacturing (AM). MAPP covers a wide range of engineering materials where powder processing has the clear potential to drive disruptive growth - including advanced ceramics, polymers, metals, with our initial applications in aerospace and energy sectors - but where common problems must be addressed.
more_vert assignment_turned_in Project2006 - 2011Partners:Mace Ltd, Xaar Americas Inc, TATA Motors Engineering Technical Centre, 3T RPD Ltd, Olivetti I-Jet +376 partnersOnly 199 Partners of A Centre for Innovative Manufacturing and Construction are shown here.Mace Ltd,Xaar Americas Inc,TATA Motors Engineering Technical Centre,3T RPD Ltd,Olivetti I-Jet,SODA Project,Krause Automation,Motor Insurance Repair Research Centre,Ricardo UK,3D Systems Inc,Rolls-Royce Plc (UK),Hapold Consulting Ltd,Tesco,Bafbox Ltd,NCAR,Charnwood Borough Council,ArvinMeritor Automotive Light Vehicle,Autoliv Ltd,StubbsRich Ltd,Rim-Cast,SIEMENS PLC,CMP Batteries Ltd,Rozone Limited,Jaguar Cars,ManuBuild,Bafbox Ltd,National Physical Laboratory NPL,IPLON GMBH - THE INFRANET COMPANY,BT Group Property,Inst for Surface and Boundary Layers,Charnwood Borough Council,SODA Project,Boeing Co,Marylebone Cricket Club,AMEC,Huntleigh Healthcare Ltd,Delcam International plc,Terraplana,UK Sport,ITESM,Georgia Institute of Technology,Head Sport AG,TRW Conekt,Marden Edwards Ltd,Steel Construction Institute,Autoliv Ltd,Mouchel Parkman,EMDA,InfoVision Systems Ltd.,Ontology Works Inc,Exide Technologies,Collins and Aikman Ltd,Leicester Glenfield Hospital,Rozone Limited,Textile Recycling Association,BPB plc,John Laing Plc,Development Securities Plc,Giddings and Lewis INC,Collins and Aikman Ltd,Licensing Executive Society Intl LESI,TNO Industrial Technology,Schneider Electric (Germany),Laser Optical Engineering Ltd,Scott Wilson Ltd,Wates Construction,Fully Distributed Systems (United Kingdom),TRW Conekt,ThyssenKrupp Krause GmbH,BRE Group (Building Res Establishment),GlaxoSmithKline (Harlow),3T Additive Manufacturing Ltd,Hopkinson Computing Ltd,Econolyst Ltd,Lend Lease,Marylebone Cricket Club,Aptiv (United Kingdom),TNO Industrial Technology,Toyota Motor Europe,NPL,Novel Technical Solutions,BAE Systems,Leicestershire County Cricket Club,FORD MOTOR COMPANY LIMITED,Motor Industry Research Assoc. (MIRA),BT Group Property,Shepherd Construction Ltd,Capita,GSK,Bae Systems Defence Ltd,Cross-Hueller Ltd,CWV Group Ltd,In2Connect Ltd,Engage GKN,Datalink Electronics,Penn State University College of Medicin,Goodrich Actuation Systems,Siemens PLMS Ltd,Dept for Env Food & Rural Affairs DEFRA,LOE,Lawrence M Barry & Co,Birmingham City Council,Nike,The European Recycling Company,British Gypsum Ltd,Arup Group,John Laing Plc,Siemens Transportation,Boeing Co,Lenze UK Ltd.,Renishaw plc (UK),North West Aerospace Alliance,STI,Ove Arup & Partners Ltd,Regentec Limited,Let's Face It,Huntsman Advanced Materials UK Ltd,National Centre for Atmospheric Research,The European Recycling Company,Capita Symonds,Delphi Diesel Systems Ltd,B H R Group Ltd,Mace Ltd,Buro Happold,Leicestershire County Cricket Club,Pentland Group plc,Rover Group Ltd,ArvinMeritor Automotive Light Vehicle,CSC (UK) Ltd,GlaxoSmithKline PLC,AMEC,BT Group,Capita Symonds,Fergusons Irish Linen & Co.Ltd,Diameter Ltd,Clarks,Edwards,Invotec Group LTD,3D Systems Inc,CSC (UK) Ltd,Ordnance Survey,Z Corporation,In2Connect Ltd,Lamb Technicon UK,TAP Biosystems,Shotcrete,Schneider Electric (France),Reid Architecture,Engage GKN,Beta Technology Limited,adidas-Salomon AG,Bosch Rexroth Corporation,InfoVision Systems Ltd.,MG Rover Group Ltd,Singapore Institute of Mfg Technology,Huntsman (United Kingdom),Qioptiq Ltd,RENISHAW,Clarks,Simons Design,World Taekwondo Federation,CIRIA,Penn State University,Sulzer Chemtech (UK) Ltd,GAS-UK,Loughborough University,PIRA,Clamonta Ltd,Laser Optical Engineering,Real-Time Innovations,Bovis Lend Lease,Helm X,NTU,Emergent Systems,TRA,Parker Hannifin Plc,Faber Maunsell,Dunlop Slazenger,Rojac Patterns Ltd,DEGW,Delphi Diesel Systems,Toyota Motor Europe NV SA,Rim-Cast,Buildoffsite,Reid Architecture,Rexroth Bosch Group,GE Aviation,Schneider Electric GmbH,S M M T,Putzmeister UK,AECOM,Mott Macdonald (United Kingdom),Ford Motor Company,Smithers Pira,BIRMINGHAM CITY COUNCIL,SCI,Ontology Works Inc,Monterrey Institute of Technology,SMRE,URS/Scott Wilson,Coventry University,Zytek Group Ltd,Webster Components Ltd,Interserve Project Services Ltd,Mott Macdonald UK Ltd,University of Nottingham,East Midlands Development Agency,ThyssenKrupp Krause GmbH,VTT ,Krause Automation,Datalink Electronics,TME,RTI,National Cricket Centre,The DEWJOC Partnership,MCP Equipment,Ford Motor Company,Sulzer Chemtech (UK) Ltd,VTT Technical Research Centre of Finland,Econolyst Ltd,BAE Systems (Sweden),Solidica Corp,Delcam International plc,Putzmeister UK,Lawrence M Barry & Co,Knibb Gormezano & Partners,Nottingham University Hospitals Charity,Fergusons Irish Linen & Co.Ltd,adidas Group (International),Nike,British Telecom,OS,National Ctr for Atmospheric Res (NCAR),Pentland Group plc,MCP Equipment,National Cricket Centre,Hopkinson Computing Ltd,Z Corporation,Interserve Project Services Ltd,Tesco,Critical Pharmaceuticals,Terrapin Ltd,TAP Biosystems,Simons Design,Rolls-Royce (United Kingdom),Delcam (United Kingdom),Mechan Ltd,World Taekwondo Federation,New Balance Athletic Shoes,Fraunhofer -Institut für Grenzflächen-,JAGUAR LAND ROVER LIMITED,Xaar Americas Inc,CIRIA,EMCBE and CE,Zytek Group Ltd,RFE International Ltd,JCB Research Ltd,EOS,Dunlop Slazenger,Saint-Gobain Weber Ltd,MIRA Ltd,Invotec Circuits,Parker Hannifin Plc,Environment Agency,Aptiv (Ireland),Prior 2 Lever,UK Sport,Nottingham Uni Hospitals NHS Trust,CWV Group Ltd,BAE Systems (United Kingdom),Building Research Establishment (BRE),Exide Technologies (United Kingdom),Highbury Ltd,CRITICAL PHARMACEUTICALS,Novel Technical Solutions,Giddings and Lewis INC,Lenze UK Ltd.,University Hospitals of Leicester NHS Trust,Soletec Ltd,SAIC,CSW Group,JCB Research Ltd (to be replaced),M I Engineering Ltd,USC,AMTRI,Health and Safety Executive (HSE),Surface Technology International Ltd,EMCBE and CE,Singapore Institute of Manufacturing Tec,Buro Happold Limited,HEAD Sport GmbH,University of Southern California,URS Corporation (United Kingdom),Buildoffsite,Mechan Ltd,Smmt Industry Forum,Fully Distributed Systems Ltd,Clamonta Ltd,Rojac Patterns Ltd,Arup Group Ltd,AMTRI,Mowlem Plc,Smmt Industry Forum,StubbsRich Ltd,Solidica Corp,DEGW,TLON GmbH - The Infranet Company,BT Group,Boeing (International),DEFRA Environment Agency,British Gypsum Ltd,Beta Technology Ltd,Birmingham City Council,Edwards,Rohm and Haas Electronic Materials Ltd,Mouchel Parkman,Siemens Transportation,Mouchel Group,Terrapin Ltd,Terraplana,Nottingham University Hospitals Trust,London Borough of Bromley Council,Galorath Affiliates Ltd,VTT Technical Research Centre of Finland,Galorath Affiliates Ltd,Mowlem Plc,Coventry University,Health and Safety Executive,Huntsman Advanced Materials UK Ltd,Huntleigh Healthcare Ltd,Development Securities Plc,PSU,Prior 2 Lever,Henkel Loctite Adhesives Ltd,Locate Bio (United Kingdom),Shepherd Construction Ltd,Motor Insurance Repair Research Centre,TRW Automotive Technical Centre,Faber Maunsell,SAIC,Webster Components Ltd,Loughborough University,CSW Group,Saint-Gobain Weber Ltd,ME Engineering Ltd,Helm X,New Balance Athletic Shoes,Jaguar Cars,S M M T,Henkel Loctite Adhesives Ltd,The DEWJOC Partnership,London Borough of Camden,RFE International Ltd,GT,Emergent Systems,North West Aerospace Alliance,GE (General Electric Company) UK,Lamb Technicon UK,Hapold Consulting Ltd,Next Plc,Olivetti I-Jet SpA,L S C Group Ltd,ManuBuild,BPB plc,Knibb Gormezano & Partners,QinetiQ,Bosch Rexroth Corporation,Next Plc,SIT,Manchester City Football Club,TRW Automotive Technical Centre,MIRA LTD,Rohm and Haas Electronic Materials Ltd,École Centrale de Lille,Cross-Hueller Ltd,Rolls-Royce (United Kingdom),Let's Face It,Manchester City Football Club,EOS GmbH - Electro Optical Systems,Shotcrete,SOLARTECH LTDFunder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: EP/E002323/1Funder Contribution: 17,848,800 GBPThe Innovative Manufacturing and Construction Research Centre (IMCRC) will undertake a wide variety of work in the Manufacturing, Construction and product design areas. The work will be contained within 5 programmes:1. Transforming Organisations / Providing individuals, organisations, sectors and regions with the dynamic and innovative capability to thrive in a complex and uncertain future2. High Value Assets / Delivering tools, techniques and designs to maximise the through-life value of high capital cost, long life physical assets3. Healthy & Secure Future / Meeting the growing need for products & environments that promote health, safety and security4. Next Generation Technologies / The future materials, processes, production and information systems to deliver products to the customer5. Customised Products / The design and optimisation techniques to deliver customer specific products.Academics within the Loughborough IMCRC have an internationally leading track record in these areas and a history of strong collaborations to gear IMCRC capabilities with the complementary strengths of external groups.Innovative activities are increasingly distributed across the value chain. The impressive scope of the IMCRC helps us mirror this industrial reality, and enhances knowledge transfer. This advantage of the size and diversity of activities within the IMCRC compared with other smaller UK centres gives the Loughborough IMCRC a leading role in this technology and value chain integration area. Loughborough IMCRC as by far the biggest IMRC (in terms of number of academics, researchers and in funding) can take a more holistic approach and has the skills to generate, identify and integrate expertise from elsewhere as required. Therefore, a large proportion of the Centre funding (approximately 50%) will be allocated to Integration projects or Grand Challenges that cover a spectrum of expertise.The Centre covers a wide range of activities from Concept to Creation.The activities of the Centre will take place in collaboration with the world's best researchers in the UK and abroad. The academics within the Centre will be organised into 3 Research Units so that they can be co-ordinated effectively and can cooperate on Programmes.
more_vert assignment_turned_in Project2022 - 2027Partners:Xaar Americas Inc, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, CPI, Syngenta, UD +35 partnersXaar Americas Inc,Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory,CPI,Syngenta,UD,Nottingham Uni Hospitals NHS Trust,Henry Royce Institute,GSK (UK),Nottingham Uni Hospitals NHS Trust,University of Nottingham,JOHNSON MATTHEY PLC,GSK (UK),Johnson Matthey plc,Xaar Plc,XAAR PLC,PARC,Formlabs inc,JM,ETH Zurich,Pfizer Global R and D,CSIRO,Astra Pharmaceuticals Canada,NTU,University of Delaware,Centre for Process Innovation CPI (UK),EPFZ,Pfizer Global R and D,Velcro,Syngenta,CPI Ltd,University of Delaware,CSIRO,AstraZeneca (Global),Pfizer (United Kingdom),LBNL,PARC,Formlabs inc,Boston Micro Fabrication,Velcro,Henry Royce InstituteFunder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: EP/W017032/1Funder Contribution: 5,865,540 GBP3D Printing elicits tremendous excitement from a broad variety of industry - it offers flexible, personalised and on demand scalable manufacture, affording the opportunity to create new products with geometrical / compositional freedoms and advanced functions that are not possible with traditional manufacturing practices. 3D Printing progresses rapidly: for polymerics, we have seen significant advances in our ability to be able to manufacture highly functional structures with high resolution projection through developments in projection micro stereolithography, multimaterial ink jet printing and two photon polymerisation. There have also been exciting advances in volumetric 3DP with the emergence of Computational Axial Lithography and more recent work such as 'xolo'. Alongside these advances there has also been developments in materials, e.g., in the emergence of '4D printing' using responsive polymers and machine learning / AI on 3DP is beginning to be incorporated into our understanding. The impact of these advances is significant, but 3D printing technology is reaching a tipping point where the multiple streams of effort (materials, design, process, product) must be brought together to overcome the barriers that prevent mass take up by industry, i.e., materials produced can often have poor performance and it is challenging to match them to specific processes, with few options available to change this. Industry in general have not found it easy to adopt this promising technology or exploit advanced functionality of materials or design, and this is particularly true in the biotech industries who we target in this programme grant - there is the will and the aspiration to adopt 3D printing but the challenges in going from concept to realisation are currently too steep. A key challenge stymying the adoption of 3D printing is the ability to go from product idea to product realisation: each step of the workflow (e.g., materials, design, process, product) has significant inter-dependent challenges that means only an integrated approach can ultimately be successful. Industry tells us that they need to go significantly beyond current understanding and that manufacturing products embedded with advanced functionality needs the capability to quickly, predictably, and reliably 'dial up' performance, to meet sector specific needs and specific advanced functionalities. In essence, we need to take a bottom-up, scientific approach to integrate materials, design and process to enable us to produce advanced functional products. It is therefore critical we overcome the challenges associated with identifying, selecting, and processing materials with 3DP in order to facilitate wider adoption of this pivotal manufacturing approach, particularly within the key UK sectors of the economy: regenerative medicine, pharmaceutical and biocatalysis. Our project will consider four Research Challenges (RCs): PRODUCT: How can we exploit 3D printing and advanced polymers to create smart 21st Century products ready for use across multiple sectors? MATERIALS: How can we create the materials that can enable control over advanced functionality / release, that are 3D Printable? DESIGN: How can we use computational / algorithmic approaches to support materials identification / product design? PROCESS: How can we integrate synthesis, screening and manufacturing processes to shorten the development and translation pipeline so that we can 'dial up' materials / properties? By integrating these challenges, and taking a holistic, overarching view on how to realise advanced, highly functional bespoke 3D printed products that have the potential to transform UK high value biotechnology fields and beyond.
more_vert assignment_turned_in Project2016 - 2021Partners:UK-CPI, UCL, Xaar Americas Inc, XAAR PLC, Xaar Plc +4 partnersUK-CPI,UCL,Xaar Americas Inc,XAAR PLC,Xaar Plc,GlaxoSmithKline plc (remove),UK-CPI (dup'e),GlaxoSmithKline,GlaxoSmithKline (Harlow)Funder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: EP/N024915/1Funder Contribution: 1,945,930 GBPToothpastes - and especially specialised pharmaceutical toothpastes, whose major gel component is not water-based - have a surprisingly complex and ill-understood manufacturing process. There is the background fluid, which is already a mixture of a viscous liquid and a polymer; then solid particles are added. These are abrasive and do much of the tooth cleaning; but they also swell during processing, and the system becomes much thicker when they are added. Finally surfactant is added to help the toothpaste to foam in the mouth; and just to complicate matters further, air bubbles also creep in during processing. In this project, we will systematically address all the stages of toothpaste processing. We will carry out precise small-scale rheological measurements to discover how the particles swell and how they interact once they have swollen: for example, do they absorb parts of the long polymer molecules to form a network, or do partly-absorbed polymers act as "brushes" to push swollen particles apart? We will also measure the overall behaviour of each stage of the system (the background fluid on its own, or with particles, or with bubbles) and create a phase map of system behaviour in terms of its composition. We will use advanced mathematical modelling techniques to derive new equations that can describe the behaviour of a mixture - for example, background fluid and swollen particles - as if it were a single material. Finally, we will use our new constitutive equations in computer simulations to predict the behaviour of the paste in a real processing environment, address the manufacturing challenges such novel formulations entail and propose new strategies to overcome these. The research needs a team with many different specialist abilities, across experimentation, modelling and simulation, and also needs close ties with industry to ensure we are asking the right questions. GSK is a major collaborator on this project. The project is also supported by Xaar the leader in inkjet printing technology. With the understanding we generate, they hope to make their manufacturing processes both more efficient and more reliable and also develop new formulations to address future customer needs.
more_vert assignment_turned_in Project2014 - 2020Partners:PI Ceramic, XAAR PLC, Johnson Matthey Plc, Morgan Crucible, M&I Materials Ltd +29 partnersPI Ceramic,XAAR PLC,Johnson Matthey Plc,Morgan Crucible,M&I Materials Ltd,CeramTec UK Ltd,Kennametal Sintec Keramik UK Ltd,Kennametal Sintec Keramik UK Ltd,CeramTec UK Limited,University of Surrey,University of Surrey,Excelitas Technologies UK Ltd,Johnson Matthey,Excelitas Technologies UK Ltd,Syfer Technology Ltd,National Physical Laboratory NPL,GE sensing and inspection technologies,Meggitt PLC,European Thermodynamics Ltd,Syfer Technology Ltd,PI Ceramic,Morgan Advanced Materials,Morgan Advanced Materials plc (UK),European Thermodynamics (United Kingdom),NPL,Intrinsiq Materials Limited,INTRINSIQ MATERIALS LIMITED,Johnson Matthey plc,Xaar Plc,Xaar Americas Inc,M&I Materials Ltd,Meggitt PLC,Excelitas Technologies (United Kingdom),GE sensing and inspection technologiesFunder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: EP/L017695/1Funder Contribution: 2,920,230 GBPThe world around us is full of modern technology designed to make our lives safer, more comfortable and more efficient. Such technology is made possible by materials and devices that are able to interact with their surrounding environment either by sensing or acting upon it. Examples of such devices include motion detectors, fuel injectors, engine sensors and medical diagnostic tools. These interactive devices contain functional materials that can pose health hazards, are obtained from parts of the world where supply cannot be guaranteed or are relatively scarce. If access to these functional materials is restricted, many of these advances will no longer be available resulting in a reduction in living standards and decreased UK economic growth. There already exist a number of replacement materials that can provide the same functions without the same levels of concerns around safety, security of supply and sustainability. However, these replacement materials need to be manufactured using different processes compared to existing materials. This project explores new manufacturing technologies that could be used to create interactive devices that contains less harmful and sustainable materials with a secure supply. This project will focus on two types of material - thermoelectric and piezoelectric - where the replacement materials share a set of common challenges: they need to be processed at elevated temperatures; they contain elements that evaporate at high temperatures (making high temperature processing and processing of small elements difficult); they are mechanically fragile making it difficult to shape the materials by cutting, grinding or polishing; they are chemically stable making it difficult to shape them by etching; and many are air and moisture sensitive. The proposed research will address these challenges through three parallel research streams that proactively engage with industry. The first stream is composed of six manufacturing capability projects designed to develop the core manufacturing capabilities and know-how to support the programme. The second is a series of short term feasibility studies, conducted in collaboration with industry, to explore novel manufacturing concepts and evaluate their potential opportunities. Finally, the third stream will deliver focussed industrially orientated projects designed to develop specific manufacturing techniques for in an industrial manufacturing environment. The six manufacturing capability projects will address: 1) The production of functional material powders, using wet and dry controlled atmosphere techniques, needed as feedstock in the manufacture of bulk and printed functional materials. 2) How to produce functional materials while maintaining the required chemistry and microstructure to ensure high performance. Spark Plasma Sintering will be used to directly heat the materials and accelerate fusion of the individual powder particles using an electric current. 3) Printing of functional material inks to build up active devices without the need to assemble individual components. Combing industrially relevant printing processes, such as screen printing, with controlled rapid temperature treatments will create novel print manufacturing techniques capable of handling the substitute materials. 4) How to join and coat these new functional materials so that they can be assembled into a device or protected from harsh environments when in use. 5) The fitness of substituted material to be compatible with existing shaping and treatment stages found later in the manufacturing chain. 6) The need to ensure that the substitute materials do not pose an equal or greater risk within the manufacturing and product life cycle environment. Here lessons learned from comparable material systems will be used to help predict potential risks and exposures.
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