
Neuteq Europe Limited
Neuteq Europe Limited
2 Projects, page 1 of 1
assignment_turned_in Project2011 - 2017Partners:National Physical Laboratory, Machine Tool Technologies Ltd, NPL, Machine Tool Technologies Ltd, RENISHAW +42 partnersNational Physical Laboratory,Machine Tool Technologies Ltd,NPL,Machine Tool Technologies Ltd,RENISHAW,RENISHAW,Carl Zeiss Ltd,NPL,Rolls-Royce (United Kingdom),CUMMINS TURBO TECHNOLOGIES LIMITED,AsquithButler Ltd,MTA,Renishaw plc (UK),Rolls-Royce (United Kingdom),Neuteq Europe Limited,Rank Taylor Hobson Ltd,Cummins (United Kingdom),Brown,David,Corporation Plc,STFC - LABORATORIES,University of Huddersfield,Ametek (United Kingdom),Carl Zeiss (United Kingdom),STFC - Laboratories,Machine Tool Technologies Ltd,Brown,David,Corporation Plc,Cummins (United Kingdom),University of Huddersfield,Rolls-Royce Plc (UK),Carl Zeiss Limited,Rolls-Royce (United Kingdom),Brown,David,Corporation Plc,Rank Taylor Hobson Ltd,Science and Technology Facilities Council,AsquithButler Ltd,Carl Zeiss Ltd,Renishaw (United Kingdom),STFC - Laboratories,Cummins (United Kingdom),Brown,David,Corporation Plc,AsquithButler Ltd,Manufacturing Technologies Association,CIP,CIP,Neuteq Europe Limited,Huawei Technologies (United Kingdom),University of Huddersfield,Neuteq Europe LimitedFunder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: EP/I033424/1Funder Contribution: 4,834,360 GBPThe vision of the proposed EPSRC Centre for Innovative Manufacturing (CIM) is to break new ground by creating the concept of the factory on the machine to deliver to UK industry disruptive solutions in advanced manufacturing for the next generation of high added-value products. Embracing and developing the factory on the machine concept will be a critical step in enabling a sustainable manufacturing sector for the next generation of engineered products dependent on precision and micro/nano scale geometrical accuracy and functionally optimised surfaces.Key challenges to achieving the concept of the factory on the machine are: Challenge I: Elevation of machine tool accuracies beyond the present formidable barriers to those currently only achievable by advanced metrology equipment in stable operating environments, through embodiment of our leading research in machine error modelling and reduction. Challenge II: Building sound foundations for the factory on the machine by developing new metrology instrumentation, used within the machine environment and a novel toolkit, for geometrical characterisation (size, geometry and texture) for the next generation of engineering products.In order to answer the challenges and vision of the CIM, the overall research programme is divided into key research themes and platform type activities. The two major thematic areas of research within the CIM are:Theme I - factory on the machine : to create a configurable and scalable platform for implementing advanced manufacturing and measurement technologies on machines ranging from nano, micro to large volume capability. Analogous with the lab on a chip concept, the delivered system will fuse production capability with high-precision metrology to provide an automatic quality control feedback loop for both product quality and machining process sustainability. Theme II - underlying techniques for factory on the machine : The aim here is to create new measurement and specification methodologies and products (smart software and hardware systems) and to deliver an underpinning new technology in measurement science for micro/nano scale surfaces on macro/meso dimensioned objects with Euclidean or non-Euclidean (non-rotational and non-translational symmetry) geometry and deterministic texture all to be applied within the factory on the machine environment. Platform activities will encompass: (i) Retention and recruitment of key identified research and technique staff; (ii) Generation of new knowledge and instrumentation derived from fundamental EPSRC, EU and TSB funded research projects (iii) Support blue sky research and feasibility studies in machine tool/surface technology and (iv) Knowledge exchange to key partners through specific projects, collaboration agreements, licensing, workshops, training, national networks, sand pits and open days. Platform activities will be targeted towards key partners firstly, their supply chains/end users, then secondly wider sectors of UK industry, as well as national and international standardisation bodies. Overall, this CIM research will link measurement and production in a unique way to minimise cost whilst at the same time enabling the manufacturing base to meet the challenge of ever increasing complexity and quality in manufacture. It will provide coherent research solutions to the manufacturing sector to ensure that advanced UK manufacture is at the forefront of emerging technologies. Partnership with UK industry will provide a research focal point, a national network to disseminate the outcomes and a link with other networks, CIMs and IKCs to ensure that the research provides the required outputs to drive industry forward. This would boost the capabilities of the project proposers to an unrivalled and unique position within the field of machine tool accuracy and surface metrology, allowing the research team to command a global leading role in the foreseeable future.
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For further information contact us at helpdesk@openaire.euassignment_turned_in Project2015 - 2020Partners:STFC - LABORATORIES, Loughborough University, University of Huddersfield, STFC - Laboratories, 3T RPD Ltd +57 partnersSTFC - LABORATORIES,Loughborough University,University of Huddersfield,STFC - Laboratories,3T RPD Ltd,Loxham Precision,University of North Carolina Charlotte,MTC,HIT,Loxham Precision,NTU,Taylor Hobson Ltd,National Physical Laboratory,Taylor Hobson Ltd,Zeeko (United Kingdom),Bruker UK Ltd,Ametek (United Kingdom),University of North Carolina at Charlotte,Calon Cardio-Technology Ltd,RENISHAW,RENISHAW,Zeeko Ltd,Scitech Precision Ltd,Neuteq Europe Limited,MTC,Bath Spa University,Alicona Imaging GmbH,Scitech Precision Ltd,NPL,NPL,Loughborough University,Manufacturing Technology Centre (United Kingdom),Bruker UK Ltd,TME,Nikon,University of Bath,Renishaw plc (UK),Toyota Motor Corporation (Belgium),M-Solv Limited,3T RPD Ltd,University of Huddersfield,HIT,M-Solv Limited,University of Huddersfield,Neuteq Europe Limited,Bruker (United Kingdom),University of Nottingham,University of Bath,Bruker UK Ltd,Renishaw (United Kingdom),STFC - Laboratories,Zeeko Ltd,3T Additive Manufacturing Ltd,Science and Technology Facilities Council,Bruker (Austria),Lein Applied Diagnostics (United Kingdom),TME,Nikon (International),M-Solv (United Kingdom),Calon Cardio (United Kingdom),Neuteq Europe Limited,Lein Applied Diagnostics LtdFunder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: EP/M008983/1Funder Contribution: 1,237,080 GBPSince the beginning of humanity our societies have been based on commerce, i.e. we make things and we sell them to other people. Relatively simple beginnings led to the Industrial Revolution and now to the technological age. Over-generalising, the Far East are currently the masters of mass manufacture and the West are (or wish to be) the masters of advanced manufacture - the production of high-value goods, often involving a significant degree of innovation. To be able to manufacture goods in a cost-effective, environmentally-sustainable manner, quality control procedures are required. And quality control in turn requires an appropriate measurement infrastructure to be in place. It is a sub-set of this measurement infrastructure that is the subject of this fellowship. The UK government has been investing heavily in advanced manufacturing. In the academic arena, there are the sixteen EPSRC Centres of Innovative Manufacturing. To ease the pain of transferring academic research to the manufacturing sector, there are the seven High-Value Manufacturing Catapults (the Manufacturing Technology Centre being the main one of note here). For industry, there are a number of funding initiatives and tax breaks. To support this burgeoning UK advanced manufacturing infrastructure, there are a small number of academic centres for metrology - those based at Huddersfield and Bath are the main players. And, at the top of the measurement tree, there is the world-class National Physical Laboratory - a centre of excellence in metrology. But, there are still some gaps in the manufacturing metrology research jigsaw, and the aim of this fellowship is to plug those gaps. Coordinate metrology has been used for decades in the manufacturing industry as the most dominant form of process control, usually employing tactile coordinate measuring machines (CMMs). However, due to the slow speed of tactile systems and the fact that they can only take a limited amount of points, optical CMMs are starting to flourish. On the smaller scale, there are many optical surface measuring devices that tend to be used off-line in industry. When making small, high-precision, complex components, with difficult to access geometries, it is a combination of the surface measurement systems and the CMMs that is required. This requirement is one of the main aims of the fellowship - to develop a suite of fast, high-accuracy, non-contact measurement systems, which can be employed in industry. These principles will also be applied to the field of additive manufacturing - a new paradigm in manufacturing which is seeing significant government support and, in some cases, media hype. As with high-precision components, a coordinate metrology infrastructure for additive manufacturing is required, in many cases in-line to allow direct feedback to the manufacturing process. This is the second field of metrology that the fellowship will address. The outputs of the fellowship will be in the form of academic publications; new measurement instruments, along with new ways to use existing instruments; methods to allow manufacturers to verify the performance of their instruments; and the necessary pre-normative work that will lead to specification standards in the two fields (currently lacking). The academic world will benefit from the fundamental nature of elements of the research, and the industrial manufacturing world will benefit from the techniques developed and routes to standardisation. But, ultimately, it will be the UK citizens that will reap the greatest benefit in terms of new and enhanced products, and the wealth creation potential from precision and additive manufacturing.
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