A University of Limerick research project which aims to develop new ways to join components has been awarded ?.35 million funding through the Science Foundation Ireland Investigators Program.
Principal Investigator, Dr Conor McCarthy explains the significance of this project: “Nuts and bolts have been used for centuries to join safety-critical structures together. However, bolts require holes to be drilled in the assembled parts and this leads to a drastic reduction in their ability to withstand the forces of nature and impacts from everyday use.”
Dr McCarthy added: “The component-joining industry in Europe is estimated to be worth over ?00 billion annually and it underpins a vast number of industries from aircraft manufacture to medical implants. Our research is developing an innovative solution to join components together by blending the best elements from bolting and gluing technologies. This novel solution will be reliable, reversible, cheap and efficient and we expect it will underpin the development of virtually every future component composed of different parts and materials.”
The University of Limerick is considered one of the world’s leading academic institutions on the subject of mechanical fastening of composites, as evidenced by its extensive refereed journal paper output and book chapters published on the subject. UL has led major EU research projects on joining science with top aerospace companies such as Airbus and Bombardier, and is now breaking into the rapidly growing composites automotive sector. The Materials and Surface Science Institute (MSSI) at UL hosts the Irish Centre for Composites Research (IComp) where state-of-the-art computational and experimental labs have been recently developed to design, manufacture and evaluate mechanically fastened joints for high-performance lightweight composite structures.
This project titled Fastener-less Joining Technologies for High Performance Hybrid Composites-Metal Structures has a number of collaborators such as the adhesives manufacturer Henkel, Dr. Kevin Ryan, University of Limerick and Dr Gerard O’Connor, Director of the National Centre for Laser Applications at NUI-Galway.
UL has links with over 400 universities in 38 countries and welcomes over 2,000 international students each year. International students currently account for 13.5% of the total student number and this continues to increase year-on-year.
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