Denroy leads aerospace overmoulding project

Gareth Deering, Dr Sean Black (Spirit), Dr John Rainey (Denroy chairman), Cindy Hoover (Spirit), Kevin McNamee (Denroy CEO)
Gareth Deering, Dr Sean Black (Spirit), Dr John Rainey (Denroy chairman), Cindy Hoover (Spirit), Kevin McNamee (Denroy CEO)

Denroy Plastics has announced that it is leading a team on a three-year, £3.8 million project aimed at furthering the innovative use of thermoplastic composites in aerospace applications.

The company is collaborating closely with Spirit AeroSystems, and the Northern Ireland Technology Centre (NITC) at Queen’s University Belfast, and will explore the processes and design techniques necessary to create thermoplastic structural parts capable of application in aircraft wings and other critical areas.

Gareth Deering, Denroy’s commercial sales manager said: “Denroy has always had a focus on innovation so we are thrilled to be leading this project at the cutting edge of thermoplastic technology. With the aerospace industry’s increased focus on sustainability, lightweighting and cost as well as a need for faster methods of manufacturing we expect to continue to see a significant move to thermoplastic composites by OEMs over the next 5-10 years. Denroy plans to be front and centre in that move as the go-to expert on thermoplastic component manufacture.

“The hybrid moulding technology at the centre of this project is particularly exciting because it combines Denroy’s 50 years of expertise in injection moulding with the company’s capabilities in thermoplastic composites. The materials, stress and design work we are doing, and ultimately putting parts made from composite overmoulding to the test in some very harsh test conditions, will enable us to prove out the technology’s viability for critical structural applications.”

The project is being funded through the Aerospace Technology Institute (ATI), with the strong experienced team to produce parts capable of application in aircraft wings and other critical areas. The proposed technique focuses on combining short and long carbon-fibre reinforced composites to provide efficient, integrated, structures that take advantage of the complementary strengths of both material types. The project output will provide an innovative process supporting the advanced design of more efficient, more sustainable aircraft parts in line with UK aerospace needs.

The High Performance Thermoplastic Structural OverMoulding for the Aerospace Industry or SOMA project is supported by the ATI Programme, a joint Government and industry investment to maintain and grow the UK’s competitive position in civil aerospace design and manufacture.

www.denroy.com

Company

Denroy Plastics

Related Articles

Automation streamlines the process

Web Industries’ thermoplastic composite programme manager, Mark Richardson and global director of research and technology, aerospace Grand Hou, look at how composite materials formatters are turning to automation to meet the needs of next-generation aircraft.
2 years ago Features
Most recent Articles

Embraer names the top 10 best suppliers of the year

Embraer has recognised the best suppliers of the year across ten categories in an awards ceremony held during its annual strategic alignment conference with supply chain representatives – the Embraer Suppliers Conference (ESC).
4 days ago News

Login / Sign up