Reliance Precision receives £300k funding boost for SHAPE
Posted to News on 18th Feb 2016, 17:23

Reliance Precision receives £300k funding boost for SHAPE

Reliance Precision is announcing the Self-Healing Alloys for Precision Engineering (SHAPE) Programme in which the company has been awarded 300k of funding by the Aerospace Technology Institute (ATI) and the UK's innovation agency, Innovate UK. The funding award, which Reliance is matching with an additional 250k of internal investment, will help resource an exciting development programme bringing together a UK supply chain from material formulation through to component manufacture, via innovative material design, additive manufacturing (AM) and precision engineering. The objective is to produce lightweight components made from self-healing alloys, which when used in aircraft design could significantly reduce fuel costs (over the life of an aircraft estimated at 44,595 litres less used per kg of reduced weight) and decrease CO2 emissions.

Reliance Precision receives £300k funding boost for SHAPE

The 3-year SHAPE Programme, costing a total of 2.15 million, includes Reliance alongside Ilika (an innovative materials development company), GKN and BAE Systems, as the industrial partners and the University of Sheffield as the academic partner. The programme aims to develop and use new self-healing alloys which have the ability to resist micro-cracks.

The SHAPE Programme will use these self-healing alloys to design and manufacture lightweight components which could be used in an aircraft to reduce its overall weight and thus reduce fuel consumption and CO2 emissions. Reliance's role in this significant programme will be to develop lightweight gears using a combination of additive and subtractive processes and self-healing alloys of titanium and to test the performance of the new materials under high load conditions.

Dr Ian Laidler, Technical Director at Reliance explains: "Aircraft components are typically produced using subtractive machining techniques and component design strategies that build in safety margins. This does not lead to weight optimised solutions. Using an AM approach with self-healing alloys means we could produce components structurally optimised for minimum metal with the ability to self-repair, thereby leading to more lightweight designs. SHAPE focuses on Titanium alloys, a material of growing importance in the aircraft industry with a predicted airborne weight of 257,000kgs by 2025. A five per cent saving in weight through AM and self-healing designs would result in a fuel saving of around 2bn and 128,500 tonnes less CO2 produced. Therefore, having the capability to understand when and how to use AM to produce aircraft components is an excellent field for Reliance to be investing and developing in-house expertise in."

Andrew Wright, Reliance's Managing Director concludes: "The investment by the ATI and Innovate UK of 2.15 million in the SHAPE Programme is a statement of the UK's continued intention to develop expertise in high-value manufacturing. The funding will help Reliance build niche skills, as well as allow a significant industrial academic collaboration to flourish. This will provide breakthrough technology to enable production of commercially important components and could potentially, have a major impact on the future of aircraft design, so we're delighted to be part of this exciting programme."

For more information about Reliance Precision and the Self-Healing Alloys for Precision Engineering (SHAPE) Programme visit www.reliance.co.uk.


Reliance Precision Ltd

Rowley Mills, Penistone Road
Lepton
HD8 0LE
UNITED KINGDOM

+44 (0)1484 601002

Bosch Rexroth Procter Machine Safety Pilz Automation Ltd ABSSAC Ltd SICK (UK) LTD Mechan Controls Ltd Euchner (UK) Rittal Ltd Spelsberg Els UK Ltd Machinesafe Compliance Ltd HARTING Ltd STOBER Drives Ltd Smartscan Ltd AutomateUK Aerotech Ltd PI (Physik Instrumente) Ltd Murrelektronik Ltd AutomateUK Heidenhain (GB) Ltd Phoenix Contact Ltd WEG (UK) Ltd Micro Epsilon UK Limited Dold Industries Ltd Servo Components & Systems Ltd Kawasaki Robotics (UK) Ltd FATH Components Ltd M Buttkereit Ltd Leuze electronic Ltd