Funding from the U.S. Department of Energy (DoE) for the development of novel manufacturing processes
- The DoE grant will fund the development and commercialization of a voxeljet (NASDAQ: VJET) sand binder jet 3D printer used to manufacture massive sand-casting molds
- The new manufacturing technology will produce metallic near net shape (NNS) components for the wind and hydro energy sectors, reducing production time and costs
- voxeljet will develop and build a 3D sand printer with breakthrough size for the additive manufacturing of sand molds for casting parts ranging from 10 tons to over 60 tons
FRIEDBERG, Germany–(BUSINESS WIRE)–GE Research has selected voxeljet (NASDAQ: VJET) as its partner for the U.S. Department of Energy’s (DoE) $14.9 million award in federal funding for the development and commercialization of a large sand binder jet 3D printer, called Advanced Casting Cell (ACC), to accelerate the United States’ transition to clean power. In addition to voxeljet, GE Research has also selected GE Hydro, GE Onshore Wind, GE Offshore Wind, Clemson University, Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL), and Hodge Foundry as partners on the ACC project.
The Advanced Casting Cell project was established to strengthen the U.S. manufacturing industry and expertise to boost the cost-effective domestic production of large metallic near net shape (NNS) components in alignment of the Biden Administration’s clean power-generation strategy. The ACC will be developed and deployed to produce sand molds to manufacture metallic NNS parts. With development of the ACC, the project includes the digital creation of mold designs via a digital foundry as well as the completion of a techno-economic analysis of cost and supply chain challenges.