Lockheed Martin 3D Prints Large Titanium Domes for Satellite Fuel Tanks

Global security and aerospace company Lockheed Martin has made many significant contributions to its industry through the use of 3D printing, from propulsion tanks and spacecraft parts to missile components and fuel tanks. The company, which received three Edison Awards this year for ground-breaking innovations in autonomy, directed energy, and satellite technology, has been invested in the innovative technology for quite some time, and recently completed the largest 3D printed parts it’s ever created…so far.

In order to hold up under difficult launch conditions and decade-long missions in the zero gravity conditions of outer space, satellite fuel tanks need to be both lightweight and strong. Titanium is an obvious choice of material, but it can take over a year to acquire 4-foot-diameter, 4-inch-thick titanium forgings, which also increases the overall cost of the tank. Additionally, if traditional manufacturing methods are used to fabricate these forgings, over 80% of the material is wasted.

This infographic shows the scale of the 3D printed domes, their placement on the tank, and overall location within an LM 2100 satellite.

That’s why Lockheed Martin chose to employ 3D printing to create a record-setting, 46-inch-diameter titanium dome for its satellite fuel tanks.

“Our largest 3-D printed parts to date show we’re committed to a future where we produce satellites twice as fast and at half the cost. And we’re pushing forward for even better results,” Rick Ambrose, the Executive Vice President of Lockheed Martin Space, explained. “For example, we shaved off 87 percent of the schedule to build the domes, reducing the total delivery timeline from two years to three months.”

The new fuel tank for Lockheed Martin’s largest satellites have 3D printed domes integrated into the body to cap them off.

The tank is made up of a traditionally manufactured, variable-length titanium cylinder, which is capped by two 3D printed domes; these three pieces are then welded together to make up the final product. Technicians at Lockheed Martin’s Denver facility fabricate the domes using Electron Beam Additive Manufacturing (EBAM) technology on a large 3D printer.

By 3D printing the domes, there is no longer any material waste, and the titanium is available to use with no wait time, which lowers the delivery time of the satellite tank from two years to just three months. This in turn helps the company cut its satellite schedule and costs by 50%.

“We self-funded this design and qualification effort as an investment in helping our customers move faster and save costs. These tanks are part of a total transformation in the way we design and deliver space technology,” said Ambrose. “We’re making great strides in automation, virtual reality design and commonality across our satellite product line. Our customers want greater speed and value without sacrificing capability in orbit, and we’re answering the call.”

These 3D printed tank domes are far bigger in size for the company’s qualified 3D printing materials – previously, its largest part was an electronics enclosure for the Advanced Extremely High Frequency satellite program that was only the size of a toaster. That makes these domes, which are large enough to hold nearly 75 gallons of liquid, a pretty big leap.

A Lockheed Martin engineer inspects one of the 3D printed dome prototypes at the company’s space facility in Denver.

The final rounds of quality testing for the satellite fuel tank and its 3D printed domes were completed earlier this month, which finally ends a multi-year development program with the goal of successfully creating giant, high-pressure tanks to carry fuel on satellites. Lockheed Martin technicians and engineers spared nothing on their quest to ensure that the tanks would meet, and even exceed, the reliability and performance required by NASA, as even the tiniest of flaws or leaks could spell disaster for a satellite’s operations.

The structure of the vessel was “rigorously evaluated,” according to a release, and the company’s techs ran it through an entire suite of tests in order to demonstrate its repeatability and high tolerances. Lockheed Martin is now offering the large satellite fuel tank, complete with its two 3D printed domes, as one of the standard product options for its 2100 satellite buses.

Discuss metal 3D printing, aerospace applications, and other 3D printing topics at 3DPrintBoard.com, or share your thoughts in the Facebook comments below.

[Images: Lockheed Martin]

 

 

213 Replies to “Lockheed Martin 3D Prints Large Titanium Domes for Satellite Fuel Tanks”

  1. Pingback: poker99
  2. Pingback: mejaqq pkv
  3. Pingback: www.boyaqq2.club
  4. Pingback: LED
  5. Pingback: porn
  6. Pingback: 토토사이트
  7. Pingback: 카지노사이트
  8. Pingback: 안전카지노
  9. Pingback: 토토사이트
  10. Pingback: Eddie Frenay
  11. Pingback: otc cialis
  12. Pingback: coupon for cialis
  13. Pingback: is cialis generic
  14. Pingback: Best price viagra
  15. Pingback: cialis 20
  16. Pingback: cost of cialis
  17. Pingback: viagra for sale
  18. Pingback: ed medications
  19. Pingback: canada pharmacy
  20. Pingback: Buy cialis
  21. Pingback: order vardenafil
  22. Pingback: levitra cost
  23. Pingback: buy levitra
  24. Pingback: slot machines
  25. Pingback: cash loan
  26. Pingback: viagra 100mg
  27. Pingback: generic for cialis
  28. Pingback: real online casino
  29. Pingback: cialis internet
  30. Pingback: new cialis
  31. Pingback: buy cialis
  32. Pingback: online casinos
  33. Pingback: viagra price
  34. Pingback: buy cialis online
  35. Pingback: cheapest viagra
  36. Pingback: viagra for sale
  37. Pingback: cheapest viagra
  38. Pingback: cheap viagra
  39. Pingback: viagra
  40. Pingback: buy sildenafil
  41. Pingback: viagra pills
  42. Pingback: buy sildenafil
  43. Pingback: sildenafil
  44. Pingback: viagra coupons
  45. Pingback: aricept 10 mg usa
  46. Pingback: cialis
  47. Pingback: buy cheap viagra
  48. Pingback: viagra
  49. Pingback: buy cialis
  50. Pingback: the best ed pills
  51. Pingback: cialis coupons
  52. Pingback: buy tadalafil
  53. Pingback: 5mg cialis
  54. Pingback: viagra
  55. Pingback: generic viagra
  56. Pingback: can ed be reversed
  57. Pingback: canadian pharmacy
  58. Pingback: Aciclovir for sale
  59. Pingback: canada drugs
  60. Pingback: viagra canada
  61. Pingback: how much is viagra
  62. Pingback: sildenafil generic
  63. Pingback: buy cialis
  64. Pingback: tadalafil 20 mg
  65. Pingback: viagra
  66. Pingback: buy cheap viagra
  67. Pingback: buy cialis online
  68. Pingback: ptckyfuk
  69. Pingback: buy cialis doctor
  70. Pingback: waar viagra kopen
  71. Pingback: lasix furosemide
  72. Pingback: generic tinidazole
  73. Pingback: 5mg cialis
  74. Pingback: п»їviagra pills
  75. Pingback: mexican viagra
  76. Pingback: buying dapoxetine
  77. Pingback: cheap ed pills usa
  78. Pingback: india pharmacy
  79. Pingback: neurontin pictures
  80. Pingback: paxil replacement
  81. Pingback: ed meds
  82. Pingback: clomid price
  83. Pingback: metformin er 1000
  84. Pingback: top erection pills
  85. Pingback: southern pharmacy
  86. Pingback: generic viagra
  87. Pingback: cost of lisinopril
  88. Pingback: buy cialis now
  89. Pingback: cialis sale 20mg
  90. Pingback: ed drugs
  91. Pingback: buy valtrex online

Comments are closed.