Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta Pat Nolan. Mostrar todas las entradas
Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta Pat Nolan. Mostrar todas las entradas

viernes, 8 de junio de 2018

Additive Manufacturing for Hypersonic Missile Warheads


Designing a warhead for high velocities is dramatically different than designing a normal warhead, as it needs to be shaped differently to ensure the fragmentation occurs as intended against the target.


Using decades of experience in developing and fielding advanced warheads, Orbital ATK has designed, built and validated a new missile warhead for hypersonic speeds in less than 60 days.


In words of Pat Nolan -Vice President and General Manager of Missile Products at Orbital ATK- “Successfully completing an R&D program in less than 60 days does not happen by accident. There are very few companies that can offer a similar combination of technical expertise and schedule responsiveness, and our deep heritage in high speed systems as well as warheads, fuzes and rocket motors, enables our team to develop innovative technologies that will ultimately help the warfighter be ready for challenges on the battlefield and able to execute their missions reliably, precisely and safely.”


Orbital ATK is a global leader in aerospace and defense technologies. The company designs, builds and delivers space, defense and aviation systems for customers around the world, both as a prime contractor and merchant supplier.

Its main products include:
  • Advanced aerospace structures
  • Launch vehicles and related propulsion systems
  • Missile products, subsystems and defense electronics
  • Precision weapons, armament systems and ammunition
  • Satellites and associated space components and services

Headquartered in Dulles, Virginia, Orbital ATK employs approximately 14,000 people across the U.S. and in several international locations. 


martes, 17 de abril de 2018

Additive manufacturing to develop advanced warheads


In words of Richard Truitt -Orbital ATK’s program manager for warhead development programs- “Additive Manufacturing allows us to make complicated geometries, which would benefit a hypersonics application, without the nasty, long schedule,” .

And beyond building warheads rapidly for testing, manufacturing them using 3D Printing capabilities would likely drive down the cost because instead of a machinist starting with a solid chunk of steel or aluminum, which is expensive, and throwing away 99 percent of it, there is no waste. “It’s an enabling technology for us to design and deliver weapons or warheads and get them to the warfighter,” Truitt said.

In what is a major first for the company, Orbital ATK announced the successful test of a partially-3D printed warhead designed for hypersonic weapons. Taking place on March 29, the testing comes just sixty days after conception, with three out of five of the warhead’s major components made using Additive Manufacturing. Speaking to Defense News, Orbital said the test aimed to examine what effects the fragmentation will have on various targets.

Orbital ATK’s efforts are among many initiatives both within U.S. industry and the Defense Department to stay ahead of peer competitors Russia and China, who are both heavily engaged in developing hypersonic weapons. Orbital decided to try Additive Manufacturing on a warhead design for hypersonic applications because the Defense Department is moving full speed ahead with hypersonic technology development in the coming years as it decides how it will employ such weapons.

The company has developed its LEO (Lethality Enhanced Ordnance) warhead capability and some modeling techniques to help look at fragmentation design on certain target sets. In words of Pat Nolan -vice president and general manager of Orbital ATK’s missile products division- “Now we’re coupling our rocket motor hypersonic experience with our warhead design experience to design a warhead that can survive at high speeds, high temperatures, when you’re going that fast,”. The company wants to be ready with the right modeling when hypersonic weapons prototypes and testing begin to ramp up, and the data obtained in the test will be used to measure up against what the engineers believed would happen based on modeling and simulationThe test itself was conducted in a traditional arena where the warhead is hung from above and metal panels surround it in a half circle that are designed to measure how the fragmentation from the warhead disperses upon detonation. High-speed cameras are rigged to measure the velocity of the fragmentation. Another two panels that consist of layers of material -in this case housing insulation- are designed to capture shrapnel in order for the pieces to be measured as well as the depth of perforation.

The 50 lb (22 Kg) warhead went from conception to test in 60 days, according to Truitt. The team began designing the warhead at the start of February, he said, and using Additive Manufacturing to build a large portion of the components cut out at least a month and a half to manufacture the warhead. “If you walk around it, you will see it’s not a cylinder, it’s got some really complicated dimensions. Getting that part in that dimension in a very short time is nearly impossible,” Truitt said. Orbital received the hardware to build the warhead in less than two weeks, he added. “We are really happy to do this test with additive manufactured parts because it is going to tell us, does that actually function the way a normal component would,” Truitt said prior to the test. 

lunes, 6 de noviembre de 2017

Orbital ATK and AMRDEC: Additive Manufacturing for Rocket Motors


As part of the Army’s Missile Science and Technology Enterprise objectives, Orbital ATK and AMRDEC have developed a prototype of motor built using Additive Manufacturing, to demonstrate and mature new and emerging materials technologies to enhance system effectiveness and achieve insensitive munitions compliance for next generation weapons.

Orbital ATK has been very successful in taking additive manufacturing out of the academic world and incorporating it into our industrial design and operations,” said Pat Nolan, Vice President and General Manager for Orbital ATK’s Missile Products Division, part of the Defense Systems Group. “Our goal is not just to create industry firsts, but to create practical, reliable solutions that increase our products’ effectiveness while reducing the time it takes to get them into the field.”

The motor was developed in partnership with the AMRDEC (U.S. Army Aviation and Missile Research, Development and Engineering Center) at Redstone Arsenal, Alabama. It incorporates leading-edge materials technologies designed to improve the performance and safety of a next generation anti-tank missile system. The prototype boost motors featured a high strength graphite epoxy composite case, a reduced sensitivity minimum signature rocket propellant, and 3-D printed components. Assembly and testing of the prototype motors was conducted at Orbital ATK’s Tactical Propulsion and Ordnance facility in Rocket Center, WV. The test firings successfully validated boost motor and component performance across the full operational temperature range, closely matching pre-test predictions and meeting all test objectives.