Project Details
TRR 375: Multi-functional high performance components made from hybrid porous materials
Subject Area
Materials Science and Engineering
Computer Science, Systems and Electrical Engineering
Mechanical and Industrial Engineering
Computer Science, Systems and Electrical Engineering
Mechanical and Industrial Engineering
Term
since 2024
Project identifier
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) - Project number 511263698
The central scientific objective of CRC/TRR 375 is to establish a new class of components: multifunctional high-performance components made of hybrid porous (HyPo) materials. HyPo-components are made by combining different materials featuring a locally varying density, e.g. in the form of pores and fulfil more than one function at a time. Their functional performance is closely linked to the material or material state and the resulting material properties. Due to their high technical relevance and good recyclability, the CRC/TRR will focus its research on metallic materials. By locally varying the density, HyPo-components achieve significant weight reduction in low-stress areas, resulting in improved efficiency, particularly under dynamic stress. The hybrid material approach offers additional benefits by allowing the selective adjustment of material-specific properties. For example, high-stress areas can be reinforced for increased strength, while areas subject to thermal stress can have enhanced temperature resistance. The CRC/TRR extends these approaches to include multifunctionality, so that HyPo-components achieve a significant performance increase compared to conventional approaches. For example, the integration of areas with variable magnetic properties opens possibilities for creating sensor systems within the components themselves. In summary, a comprehensive understanding of HyPo-structures expands component design by considering density variability, material properties, and multifunctionality, leading to a new level of application-optimised product design. The underlying scientific questions are highly interdisciplinary. To gain comprehensive knowledge regarding the manufacturing, design and characterisation of HyPo-components, close cooperation between the disciplines manufacturing technology, materials technology, metrology, mechanics, design and computer science is required. Only through this interdisciplinary cooperation can a fundamental understanding of the characteristics and correlations between manufacturing parameters and material properties be achieved. In the future, multifunctional hybrid and porous high-performance components are expected to make significant contributions to resource-saving and environmentally friendly products and manufacturing processes. They will enhance the energy efficiency and performance of a wide range of products, ensure product safety through component-integrated sensor technology, and facilitate data acquisition in the context of digitisation.
DFG Programme
CRC/Transregios
Current projects
- A01 - Thermomechanical FE-FFT multiscale simulation of heterogeneous porous materials (Project Heads Scheunemann, Lisa ; Staub, Sarah )
- A02 - Modelling of local failure mechanisms and macroscopic strength properties of HyPo-materials (Project Head Müller, Ralf )
- A03 - Multiscale-multiphase topology optimisation for components made of hybrid materials (Project Head Junker, Philipp )
- A04 - Integrated component monitoring of highly loaded hybrid porous components (Project Heads Bergmann, Benjamin ; Klaas, Daniel )
- A05 - Modelling of Laser Directed Energy Deposition considering the resulting properties of hybrid porous structures (Project Heads Böß, Volker ; de Payrebrune, Kristin )
- A06 - Component design with local density/material variability (Project Heads Koch, Oliver ; Oehler, Manuel )
- A07 - Anomaly-driven reinforcement learning for process optimisation in additive manufacturing of hybrid materials (Project Heads Aurich, Jan C. ; Fellenz, Sophie ; Kloft, Marius )
- B01 - Laser directed energy deposition of functionally graded materials on porous metals (Project Head Aurich, Jan C. )
- B02 - Process-integrated foaming in additive manufacturing of hybrid components (Project Head Maier, Hans Jürgen )
- B03 - In situ characterisation of additively manufactured hybrid and porous components (Project Head Kästner, Markus )
- B04 - Graded hybrid and porous structures produced by additive fusion welding using customised filler materials and modified process technology (Project Head Hassel, Thomas )
- B05 - Model-based path planning and control (Project Heads Raatz, Annika ; Seewig, Jörg )
- C01 - Influence of microstructural notches and stress gradients on the fatigue behaviour of additively manufactured HyPo-components (Project Head Beck, Tilmann )
- C02 - Mechanical properties of hybrid porous materials on the microscale (Project Head Kerscher, Eberhard )
- C03 - Characterisation of hybrid porous materials for process design (Project Heads Hinz, Lennart ; Seewig, Jörg )
- C04 - Mechanical behaviour of hybrid components with gradients of the alloy composition (Project Heads Beck, Tilmann ; Blinn, Bastian )
- C05 - Characterisation and optimisation of the tribological properties of hybrid porous components in lubricated conditions (Project Heads Koch, Oliver ; Thielen, Stefan )
- INF - Information management and information infrastructure - Research data management for hybrid porous materials (Project Heads Koepler, Oliver ; Nürnberger, Florian )
- MGK - Integrated Research Training Group (Project Head de Payrebrune, Kristin )
- S01 - Demonstrator for the potential of multifunctional high-performance components made of hybrid porous materials (central service project) (Project Heads Kirsch, Benjamin ; Klemme, Heinrich )
- Z - Central Tasks (Project Head Aurich, Jan C. )
Applicant Institution
Rheinland-Pfälzische Technische Universität Kaiserslautern-Landau
Co-Applicant Institution
Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz Universität Hannover
Participating University
Technische Universität Darmstadt
Participating Institution
Fraunhofer-Institut für Techno- und Wirtschaftsmathematik (ITWM); Technische Informationsbibliothek (TIB)
Spokesperson
Professor Dr.-Ing. Jan C. Aurich