Additive manufacturing  

Course Contents To achieve ambitious sustainability goals that will become necessary in the future, we need to utilise lightweight materials with reduced environmental footprint more efficiently. Their structuring to prescribes load paths and manufacturing with minimal material waste will become key. This course focuses on studying the basics physics of additive manufacturing processes. The course covers the areas of biologically-inspired materials and processing, topology optimisation for design and explores emerging topics in additive manufacturing. During the course, students will gain an overview of existing additive manufacturing technologies of metals, ceramics, polymers, living and composite materials. Working in small groups, students will study self-assigned research topics and apply the acquired knowledge for a design assignment of a structural component. The understanding of the manufacturing process and the design knowledge, applying numerical optimisation methods, will lead to the creation of an own design which will be manufactured. All parts will be tested and evaluated under different criteria and critically assessed with their future perspective in mind. Study Goals The course consists on the one part of lectures to allow the student to understand the fundamentals of materials processing as well as the design and optimisation methods relating to additive manufacturing. Selected guest lecture(s) will highlight how this knowledge is applied in specific fields or applications. In parallel to the lectures, a design assignment for a lightweight structure will help the students to explore processing knowledge and freedom associated to the design and optimisation methods to create an own structural design which will be tested in a final design competition.
Presential
English
Additive manufacturing
English

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