Strategic partner: Rolls-Royce
16 December 2019Researchers at ¹ú¼ÊÃ×À¼¶ÔÕó¿ÆÄª are working with Rolls-Royce to make aeroengines greener.Â
Researchers at ¹ú¼ÊÃ×À¼¶ÔÕó¿ÆÄª are working with Rolls-Royce to make aeroengines greener.Â
At any one time over half a million people are flying far above our heads in modern aircraft. Their lives depend on the performance of the special metals used inside jet engines, where temperatures can reach over 2000ËšC. ¹ú¼ÊÃ×À¼¶ÔÕó¿ÆÄª researchers will be exhibiting these remarkable materials at this year’s Royal Society Summer Science Exhibition.
The Periodic Table may not sound like a list of ingredients but, for a group of materials scientists, it’s the starting point for designing the perfect chemical make-up of tomorrow’s jet engines.
Rolls-Royce and the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council will work jointly with the Universities of ¹ú¼ÊÃ×À¼¶ÔÕó¿ÆÄª, Birmingham and Swansea in a new £50 million strategic partnership.
Only a single class of engineering materials can withstand the extreme conditions deep within a jet aeroplane engine – the nickel-base superalloys.