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Northrop Grumman reduces manufacturing time and cost with high-temperature materials

Northrop Grumman Corporation (NYSE: NOC) is accelerating development of high temperature materials through its Scalable Composite Robotic Additive Manufacturing Carbon/Carbon (SCRAM C/C) to support emerging hypersonic and high-speed weapons.

“We are pioneering a rapid fabrication process that does not require tooling to manufacturing aerospace-grade, continuous fiber integrated composite structures,” said Dan Olson, vice president and general manager of Weapon Systems for Northrop Grumman.

“This manufacturing advancement will deliver capability to the field much faster than traditional methods, and ensures our warfighters have the latest technology and advanced weapons to counter both existing and future threats.”

SCRAM is an industrial, true 6-axis continuous fiber-reinforced 3D printer, which enables the fabrication of integrated composite structures. These structures then undergo a proprietary manufacturing process and turned into C/C to service the high temperature materials community where complex, near-net shapes are required.

Historically, C/C manufacturing techniques have been labor intensive. By introducing process automation, the manufacturing time and cost can be reduced by up to 50 percent over traditional methods delivering capability to the field faster. Process automation has also shown a measurable uptick in component quality and consistency.

Northrop Grumman is printing continuous fiber composites at a large scale, an achievement that is unprecedented in the additive manufacturing industry. The company’s process does not require long-lead tooling and incorporates in-situ consolidation of the composite, which dramatically changes the cost paradigm to manufacture high temperature composites. The company has been awarded multiple patents on SCRAM technology.

Northrop Grumman recently joined the federal government in implementing AM Forward, a voluntary initiative aimed at strengthening U.S.-based suppliers’ adoption and deployment of additive manufacturing (AM) capabilities. AM has the potential to improve the agility of aerospace manufacturers where legacy casting and forging processes are often resource and time intensive; it is a leading-edge production technology that is foundational to U.S. global competitiveness and manufacturing resiliency.

Related Links

Northrop Grumman SCRAM technology

Space Technology News – Applications and Research



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Steel sector cracks on Ukraine, energy price spikes

Paris (AFP) Sept 6, 2022


Uncertainty stemming from the war in Ukraine and soaring energy prices along with a slide in Chinese investment are causing cracks in the production outlook for steel.

The first half of this year saw global output of the metal slide 5.4 percent over the same period last year to a total 1.1 billion tonnes, according to the World Steel Association of 64 producer countries.

The steepest drops are in Russia and several ex-Soviet states as well as Ukraine itself, where production has plunged 18.8 per … read more

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