Hannover Messe 2019: BAM conducts research on 3D-printed concrete components
Traditionally, concrete component manufacturing is arduous and design possibilities are limited by the formwork. Should infrastructural elements require replacement due to damage, this repair work is often costly.
Additive manufacturing opens up new possibilities to manufacture customised products or even small batches of concrete components in an efficient manner. This is where BAM’s research steps in.
Together with Clausthal University of Technology, BAM is working on laser-based additive manufacturing of alkali-activated concrete. Not only does this have a higher chemical resistance, but in combination with 3D printing technology, it could also provide unique possibilities for industrial applications.
“Additive manufacturing is already being utilised for plastics and metals with great success,” explains Professor Jens Günster, project leader and head of the Ceramic Processing and Biomaterials division at BAM. “We want to further develop the manufacturing process so that it can also be safely applied in the construction materials sector.”
BAM is also involved in the AMITIE EU project (Additive Manufacturing Initiative for Transnational Innovation in Europe). Within the scope of AMITIE, BAM scientists are cooperating with Desamanera, an Italian start-up. Together, they want to optimise 3D printing for very large, complex concrete and mortar components.
You can find more information on all of BAM’s exhibitions at the Hannover Messe at www.bam.de/hannovermesse-en.
Contact:
Venio Quinque, M.A., LL.M./LL.B.
Head of Section Corporate Communications
Bundesanstalt für Materialforschung und –prüfung (BAM)
Unter den Eichen 87
12205 Berlin
GERMANY
T: + 49 30 8104-1002
F: + 49 30 8104-71002
presse@bam.de
About BAM
BAM promotes safety in technology and chemistry.
As a departmental research institute of the German Federal Ministry for Economic Affairs and Energy, BAM performs research, testing and offers advisory support to protect people, the environment and material goods. Its activity in the fields of materials science, materials engineering and chemistry is focussed on the technical safety of products and processes.
BAM’s research is directed towards substances, materials, building elements, components and facilities as well as natural and technical systems important for the national economy and relevant to society. It also tests and assesses their safe handling and operation. BAM develops and validates analysis procedures and assessment methods, models and necessary standards and provides science-based services for the German industry in a European and international framework.
Safety creates markets.
BAM sets and represents high standards for safety in technology and chemistry for Germany and its global markets to further develop the successful German quality culture “Made in Germany“.
http://www.rise-amitie.eu/
http://www.desamanera.com/en
https://www.bam.de/hannovermesse-en
Media Contact
All latest news from the category: Trade Fair News
Newest articles
Time to Leave Home? Revealed Insights into Brood Care of Cichlids
Shell-dwelling cichlids take intense care of their offspring, which they raise in abandoned snail shells. A team at the Max Planck Institute for Biological Intelligence used 3D-printed snail shells to…
Smart Fabrics: Innovative Comfortable Wearable Tech
Researchers have demonstrated new wearable technologies that both generate electricity from human movement and improve the comfort of the technology for the people wearing them. The work stems from an…
Going Steady—Study Reveals North Atlantic’s Gulf Stream Remains Robust
A study by the University of Bern and the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution in the USA concludes that the ocean circulation in the North Atlantic, which includes the Gulf Stream,…