Airbus opens Aerospace Integrated Research and Test Centre – CompositesWorld

AIRTeC center. Photo Credit: Airbus

Secretary of State for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy,Kwasi Kwarteng, has formally launched Airbus (Toulouse, France) Aerospace Integrated Research and Test Centre (AIRTeC) in Filton, Bristol, U.K.

AIRTeC is a 40 million, state-of-the-art research and testing facility jointly funded by the governments Aerospace Technology Institute (ATI) programand Airbus. Covering more than 10,000 square metersof gross internal floor space the equivalent of two football pitches the Centre reportedly is designed to undertake structural testing of large-scale aircraft assemblies, from full-size wings down to the individual components and materials used in aircraft design.Airbus says it provides the most advanced working environment and tools for the company,alongside external suppliers, partnersand academia, to deliver the next generation of aircraft wing, landing-gear systems and fuel system designs.

Furthermore, Airbus believes thefacility is a key asset in helping industry accelerate the design, manufacture, testing, certification, infrastructureand commercial operation of zero-emission aircraft through sustained investment in R&T and R&D and fostering greater collaboration across sectors.

Companies in other sectors, such as maritime and nuclear, along with universities are able to useAIRTeCs innovative, highly flexibleand easily adaptable environment, which includes 65,000 square metersof state-of-the-art specialist test space, a 40-meter-long strong floor, and a 14 x 10-meterstrong wall capable of testing full-size wings with a force equivalent to the weight of 240 cars using a 25 MN high-capacity loading test machine.

The facility also includes labs, collaborative office spaceand reconfigurable testing areas. Airbus notes that this combination of test assets is unique in Europe. The facility will enable Airbus and its partners to develop new and cutting-edge designs and is central to AirbusWing of Tomorrow (WOT) program, which is said to be exploring the best materials, manufacturingand assembly techniques to help deliver more fuel-efficient, cleaner aircraft. The Airbus Filton site is also home to a 3D-printing plateau and digital manufacturing laboratory, as well as the Airbus low-speed wind tunnel.

Airbus employsabout 2,800 people at its site inFilton. The company is said to be the largest commercial aerospace company in the U.K., as well as its biggest civil aerospace exporter, employing more than 13,500 people at 25 sites across the country.

The launch of this new centercomes as Airbus prepares to ramp up production of its most popular aircraft towards the end of the yeara clear vote of confidence in Britain as we build back better from the pandemic, saysKwasi Kwarteng.

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Airbus opens Aerospace Integrated Research and Test Centre - CompositesWorld

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