Materials Australia Magazine | April 2022 | Volume 55 | No.1

Page 20

INDUSTRY NEWS

Swinburne’s AIR Hub To Drive The Future Of Aerospace Source: Sally Wood Australia’s first Aerostructures Innovation Research (AIR) Hub was recently launched at Swinburne University of Technology.

The Victorian Government poured $12 million to bring together the best of Victoria’s aerospace research, design and manufacturing leaders to work with industry on real world design and manufacturing problems. Swinburne’s Vice-Chancellor and President, Professor Pascale Quester, said the new hub will pioneer materials engineering across Australia. “This initiative perfectly encapsulates Swinburne’s vision of bringing people and technology together to build a better world. I am very excited by what our experts, working closely with our valued partners, will be able to achieve for the aerospace sector,” Professor Quester said. The hub will work closely with the international aerospace industry to create innovative materials and manufacturing processes for passenger planes and the space industry. It will also accelerate electric clean energy vertical take-off and landing air vehicles, which are more widely known as ‘flying cars’ or electric helicopters.

“AIR Hub will deliver a 30 year economic, employment and technology innovation boost for Australia and Victoria, designing and manufacturing lighter, stronger and more competitive aerospace structures to propel Victoria’s aerospace sector as a world leader,” Professor Quester said. It will link with Swinburne’s Victorian Hydrogen Hub to researchers, and develop capacity for hydrogen storage on aircraft and certain types of air vehicles. “[This] enabl[es] them to make use of green fuels of the future to help meet global zero emission targets,” Professor Quester said.

Lighter Planes, Cheaper Rockets, Better Drones and Flying Taxis The AIR Hub is poised to be a global technology, research and manufacturing collaboration. It brings industry partners incluidng: Boeing, Quickstep, CableX, Furnace Engineering, Shoal and Marand Precision Engineering; alongside research partners CSIRO, Monash University and Germany’s University of Stuttgart and ARENA 2036. For example, the hub is working on ‘light-weighting’ and automating the

production of space systems like the rockets that are typically used to launch satellites. Light-weighting is known as the manufacturing of parts to achieve better fuel efficiency and handling, and faster production could save thousands of dollars per launch, opening up business opportunities in the lucrative global space industry for Australian companies. This would allow drones to travel further and deliver supplies to remote places. Dr Adriano Di Pietro will lead the hub at Swinburne, where he brings his expertise in materials design and innovation. “By using the latest technologies in digitalisation, automation and advanced materials, we will reinforce our industry partners’ position in the global aerospace industry and accelerate innovative technology development.” “This contribution to air mobility is vital to Australia’s future, connecting our people and communities,” he explained. Electric clean energy vertical take-off and landing air vehicles could become the future in a ‘flying Uber’ concept of transportation. The technology embraces the latest concepts in materials science and design. In addtion, AIR Hub will utilise artificial intelligence, augmented reality, virtual reality, machine learning and collaborative robots to support Australia’s world-leading capabilities to manufacture aerostructures. Victoria’s Treasurer Tim Pallas said it will develop “ground-breaking technology in our own backyard will position Victoria as a world leader in the aeronautical industry”. Facilities across Victoria, including the Swinburne-CSIRO Industry 4.0 Testlab for Composite Additive Manufacturing in Clayton, and the manufacturing sites of key industry partners will support the hub’s research and development activities.

20 | APRIL 2022

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Articles inside

Feature - Materials Engineering for Australia’s Mining, Oil and Gas Sector

29min
pages 42-50

MA - Short Courses

5min
pages 51-52

Breaking News

17min
pages 36-41

Published in Nature Communications

3min
page 26

University Spotlight - Macquarie University

5min
pages 34-35

A Zigzag Blueprint for Topological Electronics

4min
pages 32-33

Empowering Battery Research and Production with Advanced Analytical Solutions

6min
pages 28-29

The Ideal MicroCT for Core Facility Labs – Combining Versatility and Performance

2min
page 27

Negative Capacitance in Topological Transistors Could Reduce Computing’s Unsustainable Energy Load

3min
page 25

Bionic Eye Study Paves the Way Towards Human Trials

3min
page 24

Why Your Material Analyser Won’t Keep You Awake at Night - But the Data Will

5min
pages 22-23

What Can Go Wrong?

3min
page 12

Miniature Devices Recognised on The Global Stage

3min
page 21

Swinburne’s AIR Hub To Drive The Future Of Aerospace

2min
page 20

Why You Should Become a CMatP

2min
page 17

WA Branch Annual Sir Frank Ledger Breakfast

4min
pages 10-11

From the President

3min
page 3

Our Certified Materials Professionals (CMatPs

3min
page 16
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