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3-D printers help China jet development take off

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Use of 3-D printing means China's aviation industry is saving money and materials and could soon rival manufacturers in the US

By Minnie Chan
Wednesday, 29 May, 2013, 6:02am

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Creating a miniature plastic aeroplane using a household computer and a 3-D printer is no longer just a dream for aircraft enthusiasts. But what about printing out a real plane?

Chinese scientists and aviation engineers says it's possible.

And they're now starting to print out aircraft components from a 3-D printer without the help of traditional manufacturing processes such as casting, forging and assembling.

These can even include key structures such as landing gear, which has to be able to withstand extreme forces.

3-D printing, also known as laser rapid forming, is an emerging manufacturing technology in which blueprints made on computers can be turned into actual products by printers that add layer after layer of material until the finished shape is achieved.

It's not clear how many materials Chinese scientists can use when printing out aircraft parts, but Stratasys, the world's leading manufacturer of 3-D printers, says its machines can combine more than 100 different materials to form 3-D products, including wood, plastics and metals. Reports on the mainland have said 3-D printing technology has been used by China's aviation industry.

It features in the country's first home-grown commercial airliner, the C919, its first aircraft-based jet fighter, the J-15, its multi-role fighter and bomber, the J-16, its first home-made stealth jet fighter, the J-20, and its mid-sized, fifth-generation jet fighter, the J-31.

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The Chinese J-20 stealth fighter jet. Photo: SCMPThe J-20 appeared much earlier than Western military analysts had expected.

Former US defence secretary Dr Robert Gates once said that China would not have a "fifth-generation aircraft by 2020".

Beijing responded by showing him the J-20's successful maiden test flight when he visited the country in January 2011.

In the 1980s and 1990s, China took at least 10 years to develop the J-10, its third-generation all-weather jet fighter, currently a mainstay of the People's Liberation Army Air Force. But the development of the J-15 took just three years and it made its maiden test flight on August 31, 2009.

The PLA Navy announced the formal establishment of an aviation force for future carrier-based operations earlier this month, and the next day China Central Television reported that the first of its J-15s had been put on the production line early this year.

Sun Cong , deputy chief engineer at the Aviation Industry Corporation of China (AVIC), the nation's leading military aircraft manufacturer, said the unprecedented adoption of 3-D printing technology for his J-15 project had made a significant contribution to its success.

"I would like to say that … the world was not astonished by our technology, but by China's efficiency in aviation industry development," Sun, the J-15's chief engineer, told Science and Technology Daily in March.

"The J-15 project started without a solid technical basis … but now it has caught up to the technical level of the US' most advanced third-generation, carried-based aircraft, the F/A-18 Hornet." Sun told the Beijing Times the primary force-bearing structure of the J-15, including its landing gear, was formed by high-tensile titanium alloy powder sprayed from a 3-D printer.

Aviation engineer Huang Weidong, a professor at the College of Material Science and Engineering at Northwestern Polytechnic University in Xian , Shaanxi , produced a three-metre-long titanium structure that is a key component of the C919's wing, on New Year's Eve last year.

He told the Chinese industry website lasterfair.com he had been using 3-D printing technology since 1995, with the output of his research commonly used in the aviation, aerospace, machinery, medical and other sectors.

"After near 20 years of research and development, [3-D printing technology in China] can produce … products that can replace metal structures made by complicated traditional manufacturing processes," he said.

"We have applied the technology to [the aviation] industry, including sizeable titanium alloy structures and aircraft engine renovation, as well as some other high-end components."

Another aviation materials specialist, Professor Wang Huaming , from the Beijing University of Aeronautics and Astronautics, told a workshop at the Chinese Academy of Sciences late last year that China now needed just 55 days to "print out" four hyperboloid cockpit window frames for the C919.

He said a European aircraft maker had said it would need at least two years to do the same job, with the cost of making a mould put at US$2 million.

"The traditional aircraft manufacturing industry doesn't only need much more time, but also wastes too many expensive materials," Wang said in a video clip of the workshop posted on the internet. "Normally, just 10 per cent of raw materials would be utilised, with the rest all cut and dropped during the processes of casting moulds, forging, cutting and polishing."

For example, US-based Lockheed Martin Aeronautics needed 2,796kg of titanium alloy to produce an F-22 fighter jet, but only 144kg of the material actually made it into the plane, he added.

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Wang, who formed a team of researchers to study 3-D printing materials in 2000, said they were now able to mix many different kinds of materials together to imitate some sophisticated, high-end aircraft components.

He said his research team had made many breakthroughs in 3-D printing technology, such as printing out key titanium alloy structures as big as 5 square metres which had been used in many new-generation military aircraft projects.

"For me and many Chinese aircraft engineers, we all dream of 'printing out' all kinds of plane components we need one day," he said.

He believed 3-D printing technology could soon help the country overcome a long-standing technical bottleneck that was hampering its production of sophisticated aviation engines.

Sidney Wong, an engineer and associate director of the Hong Kong Polytechnic University's Institute for Enterprise, said 3-D printing technology could help China speed up the research and development of new generation aircraft.

"As 3-D printing technology can save both time and materials, researchers can easily print out all kinds of high-end and sophisticated components they need to assemble prototypes within a short period," he said. "Without the hindrance of making moulds and other complicated traditional manufacturing procedures, the cost of making prototypes is much lower, and scientists and engineers can repeatedly produce more and more duplicates for tests and modification."

Wang said China's large-scale 3-D printing technology had surpassed that of the United States because many US counterparts were just using the new technology to produce "knick-knacks".

But Luo Jun , chief executive of the Beijing-based Asian Manufacturing Association, said there was "still a certain gap" that Chinese scientists needed to bridge to catch up with their US and European counterparts in the development of 3-D printing.

"It's a fact that all sizeable and intricate metal structures and components made by 3-D printers in China can replace those parts made by traditional manufacturing processes … but such an achievement still fails to solve the core problem of China's aircraft manufacturing," Luo said, referring to the engine problem.

"3-D printing is an emerging technology, but it still needs to be underpinned by traditional industry … there is still a certain gap between China and the US' technology, including its stability, accuracy, materials and related skills."

In August, US President Barack Obama announced the formation of the National Additive Manufacturing Innovation Institute, with an initial investment of US$30 million, the National Journal reported.

It said the US Army had deployed a helicopter-borne 3-D printing laboratory to Afghanistan, and the military already used 3-D printers to manufacture some non-critical aircraft components.

3-D printers help China jet development take off | South China Morning Post
 
China’s 3D Printing Revenue Expected to Soar

Kyle Maxey posted on June 03, 2013

At last weeks World 3D Printing Technology Industry Conference in Beijing, Luo Jun, CEO of Beijing’s Asian Manufacturing Association (AMA), predicted that revenues from Chinese 3D printing companies are expected to reach 10 billion Yuan ($1.6B. For comparison, the US 3D revenues in 2012 totaled some 700-800 million dollars:Chinese Competitors Will Burst The 3D Printing Bubble - Seeking Alpha) within 3 years.

Although the number of 3D printer manufacturers in Asia has blossomed in the last decade, Luo Jun cautions that 3D printing manufacturers still have a good deal of work ahead of them. “"What we need to do now is to integrate 3-D printing technology with an ongoing industrial transformation and upgrade,” said Jun.

To help further this industrial integration agenda, the AMA has plans to build 10 3D printing innovation centers in 10 cities across China. Each center will be funded to the tune of 20 million Yuan ($3.3M) and will include showrooms and education centers where industrial leaders can familiarize themselves with the ins and outs of 3D printing technology.

As of March, the AMA had already signed an agreement to establish the first of these centers in the heart of the Nanjin Economic and Technological Develelopment Zone. This center will be home to not only showrooms and education centers but also a state of the art R&D lab for the development and refinement of new and old 3D printing methods.

While some more cynical observers might question whethter Luo Jun’s assessment of China's 3D printing future is merely wide-eyed cheerleading, a number of influential foreign voices echoed and advanced his claims. One such voice was that of Graham Tromans, chair of the UK’s Additive Manufacturing Association. In his comments to conference attendees, Tromans said that within three to five years China could be home to the world’s largest 3D printing market. However, Tromans did acknowledge that if China wanted to reach that level it would need to push for advancements in large, industrial 3D printers.

Well, the world's largest industrial 3D-printer has arrived at the drop of the above bold words:

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(Report in Chinese with photos)
 
3D printing technology wave of the future

Global Times | 2013-6-8 5:03:02

By Zhang Ye


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A decorative paperweight made from 3D printing technology. Photo: CFP


As the non-tech savvy struggle to swim in the vast sea of digital information out there, a Beijing-based trade body is busy diving ahead - hoping to popularize the mind-boggling 3D printing technology, which works by transforming 3D digital information into physical objects.

3D printing will not only play a "very positive role" in upgrading Chinese manufacturing, but also help bring small-scale manufacturing out of factories and into homes, hospitals, and schools, said Luo Jun, CEO of the Asian Manufacturing Association, at the 2013 World 3D Printing Technology Industry Conference in Beijing last month.

The technology is taking off in other areas, too. The recent box office-hit Iron Man 3 put 3D printing into action - and was perhaps best displayed by Iron Man's impressive 3D-printed suit.

A cutting-edge 3D printer can build up a real-world object from a computer-created digital model by laying down layers of liquid, powder or cell tissue. It will be able to make almost everything, from bread to clothes, and from simple chess pieces to more complicated airplanes, Hod Lipson, an associate professor of Cornell University, wrote in his book titled Fabricated: The New World of 3D Printing.

Lipson's research group has been painstakingly working on food printers since 2010, in hopes that people's health and metabolic data can be calculated by the machine to print out tailored meals for individual nutrition needs.

Lipson predicts 3D printing to eventually help humans master the physical world so that ordinary people can print complex tools at home, which will create huge changes for traditional manufacturing industries - and even possibly lead the global supply chain to be replaced by flexible small-scale manufacturers.

By that time, related professions are likely to be cast aside by this revolutionary technology, yet as intellectual property laws become invalid, the turn will balance the shift somewhat by fostering new jobs and opportunities for other markets, said Lipson.

A digital revolution?

Plugging a 3D printer into digital technology can not only copy existing objects but also create new ones.

With this feature, 3D printing is highly likely to push the third industrial revolution, namely a digital revolution - spurring change from mechanical and electronic production technologies to ones digital in nature, Xu Zhilei, a Chinese Academy of Engineering professor, said at the conference.

But other industrial experts think it's too early to jump to such conclusions.

Terry Wohlers, president of the US 3D printing research firm Wohlers Associates, expressed his concern about the unclear prospect of 3D printing at the conference, saying that, "We are not sure whether this technology is going to expand the limits of people's life like what the Internet is doing."

After all, as Shi Yusheng, vice director of China 3D Printing Technology Industry Alliance, pointed out at the press event, the technology still remains in the research phase and it is likely to take at least another 20 years for day-to-day uses to be realized.

But that doesn't mean 3D hasn't come a far way already. Over the past 30 years, the technology has been applied to aerospace, automotive and biomedical industries, producing highly complex designs that are too difficult for traditional techniques, said Luo.

Compared to traditional techniques, which rely on subtracting or cutting materials, 3D printing is an additive manufacturing process and only contributes what is needed - making 3D-printed mechanical parts lighter while reducing costly fuel consumption.

Luo noted that, however, 3D printing is not the best choice when it comes to mass production as it is more suitable for production in smaller batches, particularly for industrial designs.

Yet for all the skepticism, Chinese and foreign governments still have great expectations for 3D printing.

US President Obama said in February that 3D printing will play a positive role in boosting the US economy and asked Congress to "guarantee that the next revolution in manufacturing is made in America."

"We plan to establish a 3D printing research center, to revolutionize the way we produce as quickly as possible and cut increasing labor costs in the sector," Li Chuanheng, director of Economic and Information Technology Committee in Weifang, East China's Shandong Province, told the Global Times.

Obstacles ahead

3D printing has aroused major social appeal but will suffer from a flat market for some time, and thus, companies should not rush to the field, said Shi.

Manufacturers are hesitant to purchase 3D printers due to low-efficiency concerns, Zheng Lianming, sales manager of Nanjing Baoyan Automation Co, told the Global Times.

For instance, the printing of a door handle for an airplane may average 40 hours, much longer than one coming from a mature production line, he said.

Apart from the technology issue, the high selling price of the machines will be another hindrance to the popularity of industrial 3D printing, noted Zheng.

An imported industrial 3D printer from the UK sells for a steep $1 million, which can only be afforded by a government-supported research center, Luo Zheng, sales manager of global 3D printing company Renishaw (Shanghai) Trading Co, told the Global Times.

This means that the 3D printing business lies more with the services offered as opposed to the machines sold. But, it's hard to turn profits from such services due to the high costs of materials involved, Zheng said.

The company has to use more expensive imported "inks" as domestic ones are not yet ready for industrial 3D printing, he said. Given this obstacle, domestic companies are now starting to expand into personal 3D printing, which can make use of lower-quality materials unlike industrial printing.

"We are scheduled to sell 3D printers to DIY-conscious US families in late June, and anticipate satisfactory sales due to our competitive price edge over our foreign peers," he noted.

3D printers produced by Zheng's company are priced at around 50,000 yuan ($8,150) each, while the prices of same products from foreign companies can be several times higher.


However, the cheaper price tag does not ensure a large number of sales.

Products constructed by domestic 3D printers tend to be poorer in quality and lower in precision than those made by foreign machines. Additionally, because domestic companies fail to pay enough attention to software development for 3D printers, consumers may not prefer Chinese machines, said Zhang Chonghao, general engineering of Jiangsu Hehao Laser Tech.

But Zhang said that it's not time for foreign firms to count their chickens yet either, as they, too, have a long way to go yet in developing a mature method, which will be able to commercialize the new technology.

3D printing technology wave of the future - SCI_TECH - Editor's Picks - Globaltimes.cn
 
June 11, 2013

World’s Largest 3D printer built in China

By Kyle Maxey

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Dalian University of Technology has announced the development of the world’s largest 3D printer.

The massive laser sintering 3D printer has a build volume of 1.8m3 and can reduce print processing time by some 35%. In addition, the printer’s “contour scanning” printing technique can also reduce manufacturing costs by 40% when compared to other laser sintering machines.

According to Yao Shan, Professor at Dalian University, the key to the time and cost reductions is the fact that the printer only makes an outline of each layer rather than building out an entire solid surface. Once the model’s outline has been printed it is cured in an 180C furnace where it becomes solid.

One other notable benefit of Dalian’ new printer is its use of industrial grade sand as its print material. At a price of about $163 per ton, this new machine might not just be the largest printer in the world, it might have the cheapest print material to boot.:coffee:

World
 
:coffee:

China’s Plan to Survive the 3D-Printing
Revolution: Own the Market

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A 3D printer on display at a technology conference in Shanghai. // Flickr user TechYizu
 
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