AIHEC/TCU Advanced Manufacturing Network Initiative

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Transcript of AIHEC/TCU Advanced Manufacturing Network Initiative

Sandia National Laboratories is a multi-mission laboratory managed and operated by Sandia Corporation, a wholly owned subsidiary of Lockheed Martin Corporation, for

the U.S. Department of Energy’s National Nuclear Security Administration under contract DE-AC04-94AL85000.

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AIHEC/TCU Advanced Manufacturing Network Initiative

Stan AtcittyEnergy Storage Technology and Systems Department 06111Sandia National Laboratories

SAND2016-12498 C

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Background

Grew up on the Navajo Reservation in Shiprock, NM

My grandmother, Yil ee baa’ Atcitty

Rug made by my mother, Betty Mae Atcitty

https://www.awesomestories.com/asset/view/Navajo-Reservation-Map

http://www.crystalinks.com/navajo.html

: Tribal College Movement

In 1968, the first tribal college was created

by American Indiansfor American Indians

Diné College, Navajo Nation: 4 Decades of Self-Determination

37 TCUs – Over 88 Campus Sites in U.S.

Serving 65,000+ American Indians in 15 states through academic and

community education programs.

34 TCUs are chartered by their respective Tribal governments; 3 are

chartered by the U.S. government)

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TCUs:American Indian

Higher Education Where the American

Indians Are!

TCUs:MT & ND: All Tribes = TCUs

AZ, MT, ND: Largest Tribes = TCUs

The collective

spirit and unifying

voice of our

nation’s Tribal

Colleges and

Universities.

AIHEC: Collective Voice & Spirit of TCUs…

• Today, AIHEC’s Duties & Potential Have Expanded, Nationally & Internationally, including new partners (e.g. Alliance)

• Established in mid-1970s to Advocate for Federal TCU Legislation and Funding

AIHEC Proprietary

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AIHEC’s Vision is:

Sovereign Nations through Excellence in Tribal Higher Education.Al Kuslikis – Senior Associate for Strategic Initiative

Vision Statement

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AIHEC TCU Advanced Manufacturing Network Initiative Goal 1: Establish an advanced manufacturing career pipeline

for American Indian engineers and technicians. Goal 2: Pursue research, development, and manufacturing

project opportunities that address Tribal Nation-building priorities

Vision: “Tribal Nation-building” - Work with Tribes to create jobs and a locally-trained workforce to fill them

Advancing students Advancing tribal nations

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Activities

Course and Curriculum

Development

Professional Development

for faculty

Summer Institute

hosted by SIPI with SNL

mentors

R&D projects with Tribal enterprise partners,

industry, and National

Labs

Student Internships at National

Labs

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SaliSalish Kootenai College

Real-Time Operating Systems for Command and Control of Nanosatellites and Drones

Project lead: Thomas TrickelDepartment Chair – Information Technology and Engineering

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In the summer of 2010, a group of students and faculty at SKC began the work of designing a CubeSat, a 10 cm X 10 cm X 10 cm satellite with a mass that does not exceed 1 kg. It is named Nʷist Q́ʷiq́ʷay in the Salish language and is commonly referred to as BisonSat.

The primary objective of Nʷist Q́ʷiq́ʷay is educational, with a secondary objective of demonstrating the acquisition of targeted 100-meter or better resolution visible light imagery of the Earth

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Nanosatellite/Drone ElectronicsRemote Sensing Systems

Design and development challenges: Command, Control, Data Handling RTOS – Real Time Operating System (FreeRTOS) Failure analysis – BisonSat not responding to

transmissionsAdvanced Manufacturing applications: 3D printed circuit boards Structural components Metrology

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Sandia’s Contributions

information and guidance on science based failure analysis techniques

characterization of Advanced Manufactured materials

state-of-the-art tools and techniques and technical guidance for rapid prototyping lab

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Dr. Christopher Griffen Technical Director – Great Lakes Composites Institute Bay Mills Community College

COMPOSITE MATERIAL AND SUBSYSTEM TECHNOLOGIES

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FES units store or release energy with the assistance of a drive unit and generator respectively. The polar moment of inertia increases the energy capacity through mass and diameter. It contributes as a linear factor. The rotational speeds which can reach 50K rpm in large systems contributes as the square of the speed.

Heavier mass and higher speed is a tradeoff due to dynamic force issues (centripetal forces, gyroscopic moments, imbalance).

FES is a strong complimentary as well as alternative technology to batteries without the drawbacks of extreme temperatures, shorter service life and on demand need.

Sandia’s contributions: Technical information on current FWES design methodologies and state-of-the-art manufacturing techniques.

Flywheel Energy Storage Systems

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The use of Basalt continuous fiber reinforcement matrix with a Polyphenylene Sulfide (PPS) resin carrier has excellent performance attributes in comparison to Kevlar/Thermoset materials

BMCC/GLCI has completed initial prototype work and testing as a suitable alternative and is refining the process in final panel manufacturing.

Work will be conducted with CCCC/Sioux Manufacturing Application: Electrical power systems require enclosures that are durable enough to withstand sudden impact localized forces, non-conductive, flame/ignition resistance, chemical/corrosion resistance and have environmental stability.

Sandia’s contributions: state-of-the-art information in advanced materials for high speed projectile protection

Impact Resistant Panels

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Concrete foundations and lighter weight support structures are relying more on fiber reinforced composite materials.

Increasing the concrete strength range into the tensile region of loading combined with a reinforcement matrix that is impervious to chemical/corrosion attack and subsequent substrate fracture are highly desired.

Two prototype thermoplastic reinforcement components (composite rebar and flexible Geo-mesh) have been developed for concrete.

The materials selected for these were a low cost polypropylene resin and continuous fiber Basalt formulation.

BMCC/GLCI has extensive experience in light weighting applications of structures/support systems and will be engaging Navajo Tech in related R&D

Sandia’s contributions: Technical information on reinforced composite materials

Reinforcement and Light-weighting Materials

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NAVAJO TECHNICAL UNIVERSITY

ADDITIVE MANUFACTURING AND DIMENSIONAL METROLOGY FOR ADVANCED MANUFACTURING

H. Scott Halliday

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Advanced Manufacturing Degree

4 year Bachelors’ in Applied Science Degree Revised from Digital Manufacturing Degree

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Advanced Manufacturing Technology Curriculum

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Additive Manufacturing

Equipment Zcorp 650 Full Color Printer (Powder/Binder) Objet30 Prime (MultiJet- UV cured resin) Mark Forged II (Fiber reinforced within Nylon FDM) EOS Formiga 110 (Powder Selective Laser Sintering) EOS 3D Metal Printer – Partner – Sigma Labs, Inc.

Student activities Students incorporate 3D printing in projects Students learn capabilities and uses for additive manufactured parts

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A Program Focus: Metrology

Research needs accurate metrology techniques for: Precision manufacturing Additive manufacturing High dynamic range manufacturing

Advanced Manufacturing requires accurate metrology techniques achieving:

Quality Reduced scrap rates Enhanced environmental sustainability

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Sandia’s Contributions

Technical assistance and guidance on: near net shape metal parts to alleviate machining and

finishing processes certification of 3D metal printed parts inspection methodologies and techniques (i.e.

equipment operation and optical metrology

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8-week program, hosted by Southwestern Indian Polytechnic Institute

Intensive training on in-depth advanced manufacturing topics.

Provide students hands-on experience working on advanced manufacturing projects (involving e.g. 3D design, reverse engineering)

Provide students a firm grounding in key advanced manufacturing topic areas

Presentations by leaders brought in from Sandia National Laboratories, industry, and regional universities

Students from all 37 TCUs will be invited to participate in the Institute

Advanced Manufacturing Summer Institute

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Southwestern Indian Polytechnic Institute will provide:

Use of advanced manufacturing lab for up to 20 students for 6-8 hours each day Classroom for 1-2 hours each day Dormitory housing and meals for participants Graduate student mentors from University of New Mexico Participation in curriculum planning Other services to be determined

Advanced Manufacturing Summer Institute

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Sandia’s Contributions

mentors for student projects assistance with curriculum design guest lecturers technical feedback on data analysis and design

review for student projects

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Additional TCUs Candeska Cikana Community College

Partnering with Bay Mills Community College: Simulation/modeling services and coordinate rapid prototyping with Sioux Manufacturing

Sandia’s contributions: Work with BBCC and CCCC to provide technical guidance and advanced manufacturing identification

Turtle Mountain Community College Ann Vallie, Director Advanced manufacturing facilities and equipment: 3D printers, solid

works, and 3D scanners Sandia’s contributions: Provide technical assistance and guidance in

identification of advanced manufacturing opportunities in drone technology, microgrids, and other R&D project development in collaboration between TMCC and Chiptronics (certified minority manfucturer & distributor of electronic products & services)

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Contact

Stanley Atcitty (Stan), Ph.D.Distinguish Member of Technical Staff

Energy Storage Technology and Systems Dept. 06111Sandia National Laboratories

Phone: 505-284-2701Email: satcitt@sandia.gov