Special Issue "The Physics of Joining and Additive Manufacturing"
Special Issue "The Physics of Joining and Additive Manufacturing"
Link: https://www.mdpi.com/journal/applsci/special_issues/80839160HW
Dear Colleagues,
Special Issue "The Physics of Joining and Additive Manufacturing"
Link: https://www.mdpi.com/journal/applsci/special_issues/80839160HW
Dear Colleagues,
Faculty of Mechanical Engineering, Univ. of Belgrade, Serbia
4th - 6th October 2022
the Workshop will be held in presence & online
Participation in the Workshop is free (a limited number of places is available) - International Workshop website
Book of Abstracts, journal publication, lunches, and Coffee breaks are included!
Over the past years, UGent-MMS has developed a stand-alone topology optimization code for additive manufacturing applications. The topology optimization software can deal with thermo-mechanical coupled problems, combined with multi-material selection. Such features are not available in any commercial topology optimization code.
The code can also deal with large industrial optimization problems, with millions degrees of freedom in three-dimensional finite element models.
A postdoctoral position is available immediately at Brown University in multi-material additive manufacturing. Interested candidates are encouraged to contact Prof. Pradeep Guduru (pradeep_guduru [at] brown.edu) with CV and a summary of relevant experience. The desired qualifications include experience with developing 3D printer hardware, hardware design and modification and 3D extrusion printing of metals and ceramics.
Are you passionate about how creatively building and solving partial differential equations in engineering and material science could help propel additive manufacturing for a variety of critical components in industry?
Currently operating with world-class industries within automotive ICE / EV, aerospace, space, jewellery, electronics, biomedical applications and more; here at Alloyed, we seek ambitious, open-minded problem solvers.
The below opening may excite you:
Additive manufacturing of metal alloys yields great potential for the aerospace industry (and others) as it allows the generation of geometrically complex structures with high specific strength, low density and high corrosion resistance. For example, General Electric has demonstrated the possibility of printing titanium fuel injectors for their LEAP engine, EADS has printed a nacelle hinge bracket for the Airbus A320, Boeing incorporated more than 300 printed parts in their 777X airplane … For such critical applications, the structural quality of printed parts is of utmost importance.
The Topology Optimization (www.ce.jhu.edu/topopt) and Digital Fabrication and Programmable Matter (www.muellerlab.com) groups at Johns Hopkins University invite applications for multiple fully funded Postdoctoral Fellow positions in Additive Manufacturing, Mechanical Metamaterials, and Topology Optimization. The candidates will work on one or more of these topics in a highly collaborative environment that spans multiple research groups at Johns Hopkins University.
Workshop on Structural Integrity of Additively Manufactured Materials
Hotel Continental Brno
Brno, Czech Republic, 4th -5th February 2022 & online
Participation in the Workshop is free (a limited number of places is available)
Book of Abstracts, journal publication, lunches, and Coffee breaks are included!
Dear colleagues,
We invite you to see the preprint of our new paper "Accretion and Ablation in Deformable Solids with an Eulerian Description: Examples using the Method of Characteristics" which will appear in Mathematics and Mechanics of Solids. Recent work has proposed an Eulerian approach to the surface growth problem, enabling the side-stepping of the issue of constructing the reference configuration. However, this raises the complementary challenge of determining the stress response of the solid. To resolve this, the approach introduced the elastic deformation as an additional kinematic descriptor of the added material, and its evolution has been shown to be governed by a transport equation. Here, we applied the method of characteristics to solve concrete simplified problems motivated by surface growth in biomechanics and manufacturing (https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/10812865211054573)