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20210806_UT_Engineering_Portraits-0312
UT–Oak Ridge National Laboratory Governor’s Chair for Advanced Manufacturing Suresh Babu.

One of the premier research projects that the US Department of Defense grants to universities is through its Multidisciplinary University Research Initiative (MURI) program, which brings together institutions from around the world to focus on a scientific topic that is important to the military, and a professor from Tickle College of Engineering’s Department of Mechanical, Aerospace, and Biomedical Engineering is at the forefront of one such project. UT–Oak Ridge National Laboratory Governor’s Chair for Advanced Manufacturing Suresh Babu leads the project for the US Navy—one of only 24 selected out of 436 proposals in 2018—which is related to additive manufacturing of metals and alloys, also referred to as 3D printing.

As prestigious as that selection was, Babu and his collaborators across the United States and Australia have taken it even further, receiving an extension to their grant, signifying the importance of the research and how well the team is executing it, even with COVID-19 challenges. The overall MURI technical program is managed by Program Officer Jennifer Wolk from the Office of Naval Research.

“It is a great recognition and honor to have gained continued support from the Department of Defense for our research into additive manufacturing of metals that are critical for them and the work that they do,” said Babu. “Additive manufacturing is a massively nonequilibrium process that has taken materials science into completely uncharted territory. I am so delighted with the way that the MURI and AUSMURI groups have come together to form an international research team to tackle this vital exploration challenge.”

Professor Hahn Choo of UT’s Department of Materials Science and Engineering is also on Babu’s US team. The overall team includes the University of Sydney and the University of New South Wales in Australia, which operate under the AUSMURI program in conjunction with the MURI program in the United States.

“The extension of this MURI award is a reflection the quality of work being done by Suresh and his team as well as an acknowledgement of the success of the collaboration between universities across the US and Australia,” said Tickle College of Engineering Dean Matthew Mench. “Their work will play a key role in the national security of both countries in the coming years, making their breakthroughs all the more important.”

Other US collaborators include Professor James Kong at Virginia Tech, Professors Carolin Fink and Joerg Jinschek at Ohio State University, Professor Pete Collins from Iowa State, Professor Amy Clarke from the Colorado School of Mines, and Professor Tresa Pollock from the University of California-Santa Barbara. The new extension will be for $1.5 million a year for two years.

Together, the teams are working on exploring all aspects of additive manufacturing of metals in use by the defense forces of both countries, including solidification, solid-state transformation, deformation, defect structures, and microstructure evolution, as well as how rapid heating or cooling affects the materials at both small and large scales.

“Beyond the great efforts made by the AUSMURI teams at the University of Sydney and UNSW during the annual review processes, our project has so far been hugely successful because of the breakthrough research in understanding new ways that phase transformations work in the extreme conditions of additive manufacturing, which will help us design new materials with remarkable structural properties,” said University of Sydney Professor Simon Ringer, Australia’s lead on the project.

While the work is being done with defense concerns in mind and is sponsored by the US Office of Naval Research and the Australian Defense Science and Technology Organization, it is translational to other areas of advanced manufacturing, making it beneficial across the board.

CONTACT:

Lindsey Owen (865-974-6375, lowen8@utk.edu)

David Goddard (865-974-0683, david.goddard@utk.edu)