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Wide Chord Fan Blades provide a key competitive advantage for Rolls-Royce's £8.6bn aero-engine business employing 1500 staff. In service, blades experience massive loads and high-frequency vibration, creating the potential for failure. In response to blade-off events on the Trent™ 800 engine, Rolls-Royce (RR) urgently needed a means of inhibiting fatigue crack growth, and selected laser shock peening (LSP). Research in the UoA, elucidating the mechanism and outcomes of LSP, provided critical scientific underpinning for its introduction into the production process for the Trent™ 800 and, subsequently, other engines. Further the UoA now provides manufacturing process QA. Orders for the new Trent™ XWB engine, relying on LSP, exceed £60bn, with partners The Metal Improvement Company establishing dedicated LSP treatment facilities for RR in the UK (with 30 employees) and Singapore.
This prize-winning outreach project exploits our capability in 3D X-ray imaging to showcase our world-leading research activities in aeroengine materials and manufacturing processes, stimulating young people's interest in science and technology by challenging them to design an engine of their own. Involving an extensive schedule of public events, workshops and activity days, as well as a permanent exhibit at Manchester's Museum of Science & Industry, the project has engaged and enthused hundreds of thousands of members of the public. These outreach activities were recognised by the Royal Academy of Engineering through the award of its Nexia Solutions Education Innovation prize.
This case study deals with research undertaken at Plymouth University leading to the development of an innovative friction stir welding process (friction hydro-taper pillar processing, FHPP) and a bespoke welding platform that improves the assessment and repair methodology for creep damaged thermal power station components. This technology, developed in collaboration with Nelson Mandela Metropolitan University and with industry investment, enables power station engineers to extend the life of power generating plant leading to multi-million pound cost savings (over £66M in direct financial savings are demonstrated in this case) plus significant safety and societal impacts. It has been patented in South Africa and a spin-off company has been formed.
Please note that economic impact values were achieved in Rand (R) but are expressed in £ and therefore worth less in £ today than during the period when the stated impact was achieved.
The lifetimes of Hartlepool and Heysham I nuclear power stations have been extended from 2011 to 2019 as a direct result of our research into the development and application of new measurement techniques for the accurate determination of residual stresses. These life extensions are contributing to the health of the UK economy, maintaining jobs, ensuring security of electricity supply, and deferring the need for decommissioning and replacement of two nuclear power stations at a cost of several billion pounds each. The electricity generated during the life extension period has a market value of over £8 billion. New numerical modelling methods, underpinned by our measurements, are now used by the nuclear industry in life assessment procedures.
Residual stresses are the stresses locked into a component during manufacture. It is essential that the magnitudes of these residual stress fields are known as they may combine deleteriously with applied loads. This can lead to premature failure, of a component or structure, at loads the designer would otherwise view as safe. Researchers at Bristol have developed a residual stress measurement technique called deep-hole drilling, which allows measurements of residual stresses both near the surface and throughout the thickness of the specimen, even for very large components which other methods are unable to measure. Veqter Ltd was created in 2004 as a University spin-out company to provide deep-hole drilling residual stress measurements for industry. The company has grown [text removed for publication]. Primarily, Veqter is a service company, undertaking laboratory and on-site residual stress measurements on safety-critical components using hardware and analysis algorithms developed at the University. It is the only company worldwide that offers this facility and its customer base includes EDF Energy, the Japan Nuclear Energy Safety Organisation, the US Nuclear Regulatory Commission and Airbus. Veqter's measurements allow these companies to better understand the structural integrity of safety-critical plant.
We have optimised aerospace structural designs and assessment methods through development and application of hybrid residual stress characterisation techniques. Our research results on bonded crack retarders have redirected industry development programmes on hybrid metal laminate material systems and been used to evaluate reinforced structural concepts for US Air Force wing and fuselage applications. Methods to assess and mitigate maintenance-induced damage have been developed and implemented based on our research. Our contour measurement technology has been transferred to the US Air Force, which now has the capability to perform measurements in-house and support work with both NASA and the US Navy.
Automated dry hyperbaric (high pressure) gas metal-arc welding (GMAW) is used in deep-sea pipelines for remote repair and "hot-tap" connections to operating pipelines. Cranfield's process can be used for depths of up to 2,500 metres. The process has been applied in production with a new joint being made at a depth of 265 metres on a live gas pipeline. As part of the Åsgard Subsea Compression project, it will improve the recovery from the Mikkel and Midgard reservoirs by around 280 million barrels of oil equivalents, worth more than 28 billion dollars at today's prices.
Our research has enhanced neutron diffraction instruments worldwide for strain measurements on industrial engineering components, moving the technique from a scientific to an engineering tool. We led the £3.5m consortium which designed and built the world's first neutron diffractometer optimised for engineering measurements (ENGIN-X at the UK ISIS neutron source). The Strain Scanning Software (SScanSS) we developed for experiment visualization, simulation and control vastly improved the utility of the instrument to execute engineering residual stress measurements in complex structures and is now adopted at eight facilities worldwide. Numerous multinational companies including General Motors, John Deere, Airbus, Tata Steel and Pacific Rail Engineering have used the methods from our research to support their development programmes.
The Cullen Report into the Ladbroke Grove rail crash attributed the catastrophic failures of the rail vehicles to "weld unzipping" (brittle fast fracture). Research carried out at Newcastle University into the fabrication and design of aluminium rail vehicles has informed two new European standards: EN 15085 "Railway applications — Welding of railway vehicles and components" and EN 15227, "Crashworthiness requirements for railway vehicle bodies". These two standards have been developed to ensure that the "weld unzipping" failure cannot re-occur in a rail crash. The two standards were formally adopted throughout the EU in 2008, and are mandatory for all aluminium rail vehicles used across Europe.
The University was the first adopter of the Direct Metal Laser Sintering/Melting (DMLS/M) technology in the UK resulting in significant research and knowledge transfer activities in the UK and globally. The University has and continues to be a catalyst in technology introduction for 5 out of the 10 UK companies that use this technology. This accounts for £2.5M of capital investment within the UK and is currently the largest concentration of this technology worldwide. Research has involved process optimisation, analytical simulation, materials development (including MMCs) with UK and international partners. Application research engagement has been in Automotive (including F1), Aerospace, Medical and Jewellery sectors.