The Henry Royce Institute for advanced materials, which operates its hub at the University of Manchester, will lead The Defence Science and Technology Laboratory (Dstl) new £42.5m research partnership to develop ground-breaking new materials.
The institute will work alongside 23 other partners from academia, industry and research organisations, such as the Catapult Network, to form The Defence Materials Centre of Excellence (DMEx), which will open later this year. It will bring together world-leading UK experts in a national effort to accelerate advances in defence material technology for extreme physical environments.
The DMEx will research, create, and prototype new materials for the armed forces that can survive in the harshest conditions such as temperatures of 1,000°C, polar to tropical operations, high impact vibrations, shock, blasts and extreme water depth.
Advanced materials are vital to keeping the UK safe – ranging from body armour for personnel, to the protection of sensitive electronics in satellites from radiation damage and corrosion-resistant submarine components.
Defence Minister James Cartlidge said: “These exciting new materials not only fortify the safety of our personnel and assets, but also symbolise our creativity and innovation in the face of defence challenges.
“The research and creation of these materials will secure highly skilled jobs and expertise across the country and cements the UK’s place as a global leader in advanced materials.”
Dstl Chief Executive Dr Paul Hollinshead OBE MBA added: “Advanced materials are the building blocks of the future and an area of great international competition. Today we are putting the UK on path to maintain its strategic advantage by harnessing all the nation’s talents.
“This highly-collaborative partnership between Dstl, academia and industry will create operational advantage for our armed forces, while supporting UK growth and prosperity.”
Defence research not only contributes directly to the prosperity of the UK but it also has a strong track record in developing innovations that have dual-use for the benefit of civilian applications. Funding in the Centre will also help grow the vital skills we need to strengthen the skills base of the UK in this important technology area.
A study commissioned by the UK Government showed advanced materials-related activity contributes an estimated £14.4bn in gross value add to the UK economy, equivalent to around £72k per employee.
Regius Prof Phil Withers FRENg FRS, chief scientist at the Henry Royce Institute and Regius Professor at The University of Manchester, said: “I am very excited about this opportunity for the Royce to team up with Catapults, industry, other universities and Dstl to bring many of the brightest minds and state of the art capabilities together to undertake materials research and development in support of the UK.”
Dstl has pioneered numerous advances in materials working with industry and academic partners. A recent example is revolutionising the production of titanium by reducing the 40 stage process down to just two stages with a resulting halving in costs. Dstl is now working with Rheinmetall BAE Systems Land, the University of Sheffield, BAE Systems, MBDA, Transition International and the Advanced Forming Research Centre on creating more affordable titanium for defence with 30–40 per cent weight reduction whilst maintaining survivability.