WSU, government, industry research team receives coveted defense award

 

A team of researchers from Wichita State University’s National Institute for Aviation Research (NIAR), the Air Force Research Lab (AFRL), RP+M, Texas A&M University and the Federal Aviation Administration received one of four coveted Defense Manufacturing Technology Achievement Awards at the recent Defense Manufacturing Conference in Phoenix, Arizona.

The team, working together through America Makes, received the Technology Enabler Award for their project “Qualification Framework for High-Performance, Low-Variability Additive Manufacturing (AM) Parts.”

Funding was provided to AFRL through a partnership between the FAA and Office of the Secretary of Defense Manufacturing Technology Program (ManTech).

The program is built on vital government / industry partnerships. AFRL partnered through America Makes to form a team from RP+M, Stratasys and Lockheed Martin. This team then solidified a partnership with the National Center for Advanced Material Performance at NIAR.

“NIAR recently released the first public qualification database of an additive manufactured material, along with public material and process specifications as a result of the collaborative teamwork derived from this partnership,” said John Tomblin, NIAR executive director. “This partnership enabled the transition of technical data and methodologies to dozens of AM organizations allowing for the design and production of high-quality aerospace parts.”

This team produced the first polymer AM database and qualification framework, disseminated throughout the America Makes public-private partnership to more than 200 organizations. Several OEMs have adopted these methodologies and incorporated dozens of parts onto Department of Defense platforms.

NIAR also published the B-basis allowables, specifications and equivalency protocol; and is currently writing the first polymer AM volume of the Composite Materials Handbook-17. With these specifications, designers are now able to use this data to redesign traditional parts into AM parts to provide weight and cost reductions through part consolidation.

Because of this program, the industrial part supply base is expanding with additional part suppliers, such as RP+M, who can now perform high-quality AM part production.

DMTAA recognizes and honors those individuals from government and the private sector most responsible for outstanding technical accomplishments that further the achievement of the vision of the DoD and ManTech.

The award was presented to AFRL’s Jennifer Fielding on behalf of the entire team listed:

  • Chris Holshouser, WSU-NIAR
  • Rachael Andrulonis, WSU-NIAR
  • John Tomblin, WSU-NIAR
  • Jennifer Fielding, Air Force Research Laboratory
  • Dennis Butcher, Air Force Research Laboratory
  • Mark Benedict, Air Force Research Laboratory
  • Tracy Albers, RP+M
  • Cameron Rogers, RP+M
  • Rob Gorham, Texas A&M University
  • Cindy Ashforth, FAA

DMTAA, established in 1999, is sponsored by the Joint Defense Manufacturing Technology Panel. Nominated projects must have been managed by a manufacturing technology program of the Services or the Defense Logistics Agency.


Wichita State is distinctive for opening pathways to applied learning, applied research and career opportunities, alongside unsurpassed classroom, laboratory and online education. The university's beautiful 330-acre main campus is a supportive, rapidly expanding learn-work-live-play environment, where students gain knowledge and credentials to prepare for fulfilling lives and careers. Students enjoy a wide selection of day, evening and summer courses in more than 200 areas of study at the main campus and other locations throughout the metro area and online. WSU's approximately 16,000 students come from every state in the U.S. and more than 100 other countries. Wichita State's Innovation Campus is an interconnected community of partnership buildings, laboratories and mixed-use areas where students, faculty, staff, entrepreneurs and businesses have access to the university's vast resources and technology. For more information, follow us on Twitter at www.twitter.com/wichitastate and Facebook at www.facebook.com/wichita.state.


The National Institute for Aviation Research (NIAR) at Wichita State University provides research, testing, certification and training for aviation and manufacturing technologies. Established in 1985, NIAR has a $70 million annual budget; a staff of 550; and nearly one million square feet of laboratory and office space in four locations across the city of Wichita, the Air Capital of the World. NIAR laboratories include Additive Manufacturing, Advanced Coatings, Advanced Manufacturing, Aging Aircraft, Ballistics & Impact Dynamics, CAD/CAM, Composites & Advanced Materials, Computational Mechanics, Crash Dynamics, Environmental & Electromagnetic Test, Full-scale Structural Test, Nondestructive Test, Reverse Engineering, Robotics & Automation, Virtual Reality and the Walter H. Beech Wind Tunnel.