By: Anna Zarra Aldrich ’20 (CLAS), Office of the Vice President for Research
The University of Connecticut recently launched the Center for Materials Processing Data (CMPD) with their university and industry collaborators.
The center will provide the manufacturing industry with valuable data about how their materials will perform, eliminating much of the time and cost-intensive trial and error upon which the industry has relied for years.
UConn is working with the Worcester Polytechnic Institute and the University at Buffalo, each bringing unique expertise and workforce to the center projects. Another key player is ASM International, one of the world’s largest associations of materials engineers and scientists. ASM International serves as the materials data archive, enabling easy access to data by industry members and non-members.
CMPD works with businesses in the manufacturing industry, like UTC Pratt and Whitney, to provide reliable transient material property data representing how materials respond under dynamic and realistic processing conditions. Currently, industries rely on material data gathered under static conditions that may not accurately reflect the variations in load, temperature, and atmosphere that materials undergo during manufacturing.
“The center provides an opportunity for the materials engineering community to take a deep dive into the specific challenges of gathering transient material property data,” says Lesley Frame, CMPD director and assistant professor in UConn’s Department of Materials Science and Engineering. “There are three equally important pieces to this goal: the first is generating accurate materials property data; second, we need to curate these data and qualify and compare against published materials data; and third, we need to demonstrate modeling applications of how we can reliably use these data. This is where the center comes in.”
One of UConn’s greatest contributions to the center is the state-of-the-art equipment in its Innovation Partnership Building (IPB) at UConn Tech Park.
“UConn has an arsenal of equipment at IPB that is perfect for gathering dynamic material property data,” Frame says. “We’re able to leverage these resources to answer questions about materials behavior that are very difficult to answer with basic equipment.”