Reliance achieves world first machining success
The Engineering Network Ltd
Posted to News on 27th Jun 2022, 09:32

Reliance achieves world first machining success

Reliance achieves world first machining success

Reliance Precision Manufacturing has achieved what it believes is a world first – the machining of geared components from a bulk metallic glass (BMG) alloy especially selected and synthesised for space applications.

The achievement is a result of a joint collaboration between the European Space Agency (ESA), University College Dublin (UCD) and Reliance Precision Manufacturing (RPMI). In 2019 ESA announced funding was being made available for R&D projects on the use of BMGs for applications in space.

BMGs are a special family of metal alloys with unique properties. They are characterised by their amorphous structure, resulting in a material with extremely high strength, corrosion resistance, high hardness and high elastic limit. This, coupled with the added benefit of not requiring lubrication, makes a BMG an ideal material for use in space.

UCD formed the alliance with RPMI to make a joint bid for the project. UCD has expertise in metallurgy and in particular, a track record of research on BMGs. Reliance has a strong presence in the precision engineering sector, having already designed and manufactured components, such as gear mechanisms, for deployment in space.

With a successful bid for the funding achieved, the project began in the summer of 2019 with RPMI advising UCD of the type of space-related products that should be the target of the work. UCD then began a two-year investigation in their Belfield labs to come up with the BMG alloys most suited to Reliance’s gear products. An alloy comprising a special recipe of the metals zirconium, copper, aluminium, titanium and yttrium was deemed the best fit.

Cylindrical BMG rod specimens were made at UCD and sent to RPMI in Bandon for machining trials. The manufacturing team at Bandon then had to determine how best to machine the BMG rods into various shapes of precision gears. What the RPMI team quickly realised was that whilst their standard state-of-the-art manufacturing equipment and cutting tools could be used, they needed to develop the cutting process suitable for the BMG.

RPMI then began its own R&D project to develop the method, which resulted in a change to the cutting parameters, as well as significant alterations to the amount of material that could be removed at any one time. The trials were completed in December 2021, with the successful manufacture of a range of precision gears at just 6 mm (1/4 inch) in diameter to high accuracy.

Professor David Browne, who leads the UCD team comments: “We really enjoyed working on this project with Reliance. They have always been a pleasure to work with and we have achieved a lot more together than we could ever have accomplished working alone. I am looking forward to taking this work even further with our Reliance partners in Bandon and Huddersfield.

“We are planning to propose a follow-on project to the ESA which will involve testing the new gears in a small transmission device, and also experiments to test in conditions which simulate the space environment such as high vacuum and varying temperatures, from very cold to very hot. Applications beyond the space sector are also foreseen.”

Reflecting on the day and the continuation of the project, Tom Worsley, Reliance’s technical director, concludes: “The combination of Reliance Precision’s unique process capabilities, and UCD’s world-class materials research, puts advanced manufacturing in Ireland on to the world stage. Together we are pushing the boundaries of what is possible for high precision gear mechanisms in challenging environments such as space, and we look forward to the opportunity to continue this R&D collaboration into the next phase of the BMG project.”


Reliance Precision Ltd

Rowley Mills, Penistone Road
Lepton
HD8 0LE
UNITED KINGDOM

+44 (0)1484 601000

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