ÂÌñÏׯÞ

Published

DARPA pursuing new composite material and process

DARPA’s Tailorable Feedstock and Forming (TFF) program is seeking a tailorable short-fiber composite feedstock that is stampable and moldable and yields aerospace-grade properties.

Share

Its widely known that the manufacturing process for defense systems—from aircraft to vehicles to ships—is extremely complex and fragmented, often demanding unique materials and processes, complex certification requirements and specifications and specialized tools and equipment. But according to The Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA), part of the U.S. Department of Defense (DoD), the manufacture of diverse small parts for military systems could be made simpler, faster and less expensive with the development of a tailorable composite feedstock material and a single tailorable forming method.

To achieve this goal, DARPA has launched its (TFF) program, which aims to reduce the time and cost burdens associated with current manufacturing design and development cycles for defense platforms. TFF aims to cut the turnaround time for part modifications and redesigns by as much as 50 percent.

Composite materials are extremely strong and lightweight, but automated systems for producing composite parts are currently cost-effective only for parts weighing 20 pounds or more. Parts weighing less than 20 pounds are usually manufactured using metals, such as aluminum, which cost less than composites but are more dense, adding weight to the system.

“Eighty percent of small parts are made of metal due to the prohibitive fabrication cost of composite parts under 20 pounds,” said Mick Maher, program manager in DARPA’s Defense Sciences Office. “Although metal parts are cheaper to make, their additional weight leads to sub-optimal performance of the system. Through TFF, we aim to develop a versatile composite material and an adaptable forming process to allow affordable fabrication of multiple part configurations from the same work cell.”

TFF has two main focus areas—how to make aerospace composite materials more affordable and how to process this new material into useable product form, Maher said. In current composite manufacturing, developing the tools to process materials into products takes a significant amount of time. Any design changes in the platform require redesign of the tools resulting in significant cost and schedule delays. “Tooling processes can take six to twelve months per design cycle, significantly pushing out the timeline for production,” Maher said. “By developing flexible forming solutions to allow for multiple parts from one work cell, we believe we can shorten the tooling and production cycle for parts—which typically includes an initial design and two re-design periods—down to three years, from today’s average of about six years.”

The TFF program is seeking a tailorable short-fiber composite feedstock that is stampable and moldable and yields aerospace-grade properties. TFF also seeks technologies to create a tailorable forming work cell capable of manufacturing multiple part configurations with minimal reconfiguration costs and allowing rapid fabrication cycle time.

“If we’re successful, this program should reduce the weight of military systems by making composite parts as affordable as metal, eliminate the lengthy and costly re-tooling burden, and open new design space for small composite parts,” Maher said.

The TFF program seeks expertise in fiber development, resin formulation and composite processing. The Broad Agency Announcement (BAA) solicitation is available on FedBizOpps here: http://go.usa.gov/3ebtH

Related Content

Aerospace

Automated robotic NDT enhances capabilities for composites

Kineco Kaman Composites India uses a bespoke Fill Accubot ultrasonic testing system to boost inspection efficiency and productivity.

Read More
Work In Progress

The potential for thermoplastic composite nacelles

Collins Aerospace draws on global team, decades of experience to demonstrate large, curved AFP and welded structures for the next generation of aircraft.

Read More
ATL/AFP

Plant tour: Aernnova Composites, Toledo and Illescas, Spain

RTM and ATL/AFP high-rate production sites feature this composites and engineering leader’s continued push for excellence and innovation for future airframes.

Read More
Automotive

Infinite Composites: Type V tanks for space, hydrogen, automotive and more

After a decade of proving its linerless, weight-saving composite tanks with NASA and more than 30 aerospace companies, this CryoSphere pioneer is scaling for growth in commercial space and sustainable transportation on Earth.

Read More

Read Next

Finishing & Fastening

“Structured air” TPS safeguards composite structures

Powered by an 85% air/15% pure polyimide aerogel, Blueshift’s novel material system protects structures during transient thermal events from -200°C to beyond 2400°C for rockets, battery boxes and more.

Read More
Hi-Temp Resins

Plant tour: Daher Shap’in TechCenter and composites production plant, Saint-Aignan-de-Grandlieu, France

Co-located R&D and production advance OOA thermosets, thermoplastics, welding, recycling and digital technologies for faster processing and certification of lighter, more sustainable composites.

Read More
Compression Molding

VIDEO: High-volume processing for fiberglass components

Cannon Ergos, a company specializing in high-ton presses and equipment for composites fabrication and plastics processing, displayed automotive and industrial components at CAMX 2024.

Read More