Coreform wins government grant to develop efficient simulation for complex 3D printed lattice structures
Coreform LLC, announces its receipt of a substantial government grant to explore a new method for simulating parts for 3D printed manufacturing.
Lattice structure patterns are becoming attractive to auto and airplane engineers because of their high strength-to-weight ratios. However, until now, these structures have been too complex for computers to be able to analyze them for things like stress reactions or collapse responses.
Utah-based Coreform has developed an innovative technology that might solve this problem. Their patented flexible isogeometric analysis (Flex IGA) approach to simulation can handle the complexities of lattice structures with a much lower computational burden. In recognition of this technology’s potential, Coreform LLC has won a highly competitive government grant that will allow them to begin developing next-generation software for simulation of the lattice structures used in 3D printing. This grant, offered through the Federal Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) program, is designed to support small businesses in pursuing innovative solutions to technological problems.
3D printing allows manufacturers to print parts such as car bumpers with complex lattice microstructures that save material and weight. However, that low-weight approach makes the printed part vastly more complex to validate through simulation, because now the lattice microstructure has to be “meshed” into thousands of tiny elements itself (see the image above). The work of dividing those lattice structures into tiny parts for computation is too difficult and time-consuming to be practicable for any but small and simple parts. This is why 3D printing of lattice structures has not yet become widely-used.
Coreform’s Flex IGA process may make it possible to subdivide, or “mesh”, these complex microstructures with a minimum of time and expense. They anticipate using the SBIR grant to computer simulate a 3D-printed lattice structure that is more than ten times larger than any lattice structure that can be simulated today. If successful, Coreform’s technology will be key to making 3D printing a reality for manufacturers.
Visit www.coreform.com for more information.
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