Academy funds three leading engineers to tackle major industry challenges
20/04/2020
The Royal Academy of Engineering has announced the appointment of new Research Chairs, enabling three engineering researchers to establish a world-leading research group in their field of engineering. Their work will help to improve manufacture and testing across a range of manufacturing sectors.Professor Karen Holford FREng CBE FLSW, Deputy Vice Chancellor at Cardiff University and Chair of the Academy’s Research Committee, said: “The Royal Academy of Engineering’s support for UK engineering research and innovation helps to build a sustainable society and inclusive economy that works for everyone. This is particularly important in collaboration with industry and these funding schemes help UK companies benefit from the knowledge of expert engineering researchers and their university teams.”
The new appointments include Professor Gareth Pierce, University of Strathclyde, who now holds the position of Spirit AeroSystems/Royal Academy of Engineering Research Chair in In-process Non-Destructive Testing for Composites. Professor Pierce plans to revolutionise NDT for composites throughout the aerosystems manufacturing process. As demand for composite parts in the sector increases, Professor Pierce’s research will increase the efficiency of NDT while maintaining and enhancing quality.

Professor Pierce said: “I have been fascinated by engineering from an early age, with a keen interest to understand how human minds can influence and control the world around them to improve the quality of their lives and the lives of others. Together we will revolutionise NDT approaches in aerospace manufacturing and help to ensure the safety and quality of the next generation of aerospace structures.”
Professor Stuart Robson, University College London (UCL), has been appointed as Airbus/Royal Academy of Engineering Research Chair in Large-Volume Metrology.
Large-volume metrology is used to achieve accurate, precise and reliable dimensional measurements across large spaces using portable tools. The technique is at its most challenging in aerospace, where industry requires aircraft wings, comprising many components, to be rapidly manufactured to exacting sub-millimetre tolerances, while incorporating lighter, stronger materials that must be rigorously assessed in both digital and physical environments. Existing measurement systems are extremely costly and require expert input to deliver against specific one-off tasks.
Professor Robson’s goal is to demonstrate how large-volume metrology can become a ubiquitous, cost-effective tool for information gathering and integrated decision support to ensure that manufactured assemblies match their design throughout the supply chain and that the simulated and physical performance of a product also match. This will enable seamless integration between a physical manufacturing space and its digital twin, helping to open up the flexibility, agility and economic benefits of the factories of the future.

Also appointed is Professor João Cabral, Imperial College London, as Procter & Gamble/Royal Academy of Engineering Research Chair in Soft Matter Microflow Engineering, whose research focuses on soft materials, from the molecular to the macroscale, imparting function and thus value for a range of industrial applications.