Said now to be ‘among the best,’ Frank Herzog has had the great honor of being chosen as a finalist of the Deutscher Zukunftspreis (German Future Prize) 2015, with a Federal President’s Award for Innovation and Technology nomination.
This is just another feather in the cap for Germany-headquartered Concept Laser GmbH, with Herzog being highlighted for outstanding service in ‘initiative’ for 3D printing with metal, as well as offering an ‘innovation location.’ Nominees are being assessed by ten experts from science and industry, with the winner being endowed with €250,000. The award will be given in Berlin on December 2nd, 2015.
“After the awards in 2014 (e.g. Bavaria’s Best 50) and the Final of the German Industry’s Innovation Award, this nomination is a great honor to me,” said Frank Herzog. “Not least, it is also appreciation of the enormous potential of the LaserCUSING process developed by me.”
The LaserCUSING process for which Herzog is being recognized works through a fusing process. 3D CAD data is then used for 3D printing. Creating mechanical, thermally stable 3D printed pieces, the process allows for great accuracy and precision and can be used with:
- Stainless and tool steel
- Aluminum and titanium alloys
- Nickel-based superalloys
- Cobalt-chromium alloys
- Gold and silver alloys
Concept Laser has created a patented process that uses stochastic control of the slice segments–or islands–significantly reducing tension as pieces are processed one after the other.
The project team consisted of Peter Sander, Head of Emerging Technologies and Concepts at Airbus, Hamburg; Prof. Dr. Ing. Claus Emmelmann, CEO of Laser Zentrum Nord GmbH, Hamburg; and Frank Herzog, founder and CEO of Concept Laser GmbH.
The main context of the project is in regards to a titanium component that was 3D printed and meant to serve as a bracket on an Airbus A350 XWB. Used as a connector, it’s referred to as a bionic device, and is a crucial piece. They would not be able to make the current piece, weighing thirty percent less than the traditionally milled piece, without the help of 3D metal printing.
“Materials produced using laser additive manufacturing have greater rigidity while, at the same time, less ductility; however this can be enhanced with the right heat treatment,” said Prof. Dr.-Ing. Claus Emmelmann.
While the aerospace industry is an obvious choice for this process, as evidenced by the project, it also shows great potential in the automotive industry, as well as the dental and medical arenas, and the tool and machine tool industry.
“Previously we budgeted around six months to develop a component – now, it’s down to one month,” says Peter Sander, Head of Emerging Technologies & Concepts, Airbus, Hamburg.
“Initial prototypes indicate great potential of a bionically motivated approach. The process is expected to launch something of a paradigm shift in design and production,” said Sander.
Discuss Herzog’s process in the LaserCUSING forum on 3DPB.com.
Considering enormous costs in material and production that usually play a factor in industries such as aerospace and automotive, the LaserCUSING technology is obviously appealing and shows great potential for improvement over traditional practices.
[All photo credits: Concept Laser]