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Printable aluminum alloy sets strength records, may enable lighter aircraft parts
MIT News ^ | October 07, 2025 | Jennifer Chu

Posted on 10/15/2025 5:12:11 AM PDT by Red Badger

Incorporating machine learning, MIT engineers developed a way to 3D print alloys that are much stronger than conventionally manufactured versions.

MIT engineers have developed a printable aluminum alloy that can withstand high temperatures and is five times stronger than traditionally manufactured aluminum.

The new printable metal is made from a mix of aluminum and other elements that the team identified using a combination of simulations and machine learning, which significantly pruned the number of possible combinations of materials to search through. While traditional methods would require simulating over 1 million possible combinations of materials, the team’s new machine learning-based approach needed only to evaluate 40 possible compositions before identifying an ideal mix for a high-strength, printable aluminum alloy.

When they printed the alloy and tested the resulting material, the team confirmed that, as predicted, the aluminum alloy was as strong as the strongest aluminum alloys that are manufactured today using traditional casting methods.

The researchers envision that the new printable aluminum could be made into stronger, more lightweight and temperature-resistant products, such as fan blades in jet engines. Fan blades are traditionally cast from titanium — a material that is more than 50 percent heavier and up to 10 times costlier than aluminum — or made from advanced composites.

“If we can use lighter, high-strength material, this would save a considerable amount of energy for the transportation industry,” says Mohadeseh Taheri-Mousavi, who led the work as a postdoc at MIT and is now an assistant professor at Carnegie Mellon University.

“Because 3D printing can produce complex geometries, save material, and enable unique designs, we see this printable alloy as something that could also be used in advanced vacuum pumps, high-end automobiles, and cooling devices for data centers,” adds John Hart, the Class of 1922 Professor and head of the Department of Mechanical Engineering at MIT.

Hart and Taheri-Mousavi provide details on the new printable aluminum design in a paper published in the journal Advanced Materials. The paper’s MIT co-authors include Michael Xu, Clay Houser, Shaolou Wei, James LeBeau, and Greg Olson, along with Florian Hengsbach and Mirko Schaper of Paderborn University in Germany, and Zhaoxuan Ge and Benjamin Glaser of Carnegie Mellon University.

Micro-sizing

The new work grew out of an MIT class that Taheri-Mousavi took in 2020, which was taught by Greg Olson, professor of the practice in the Department of Materials Science and Engineering. As part of the class, students learned to use computational simulations to design high-performance alloys. Alloys are materials that are made from a mix of different elements, the combination of which imparts exceptional strength and other unique properties to the material as a whole.

Olson challenged the class to design an aluminum alloy that would be stronger than the strongest printable aluminum alloy designed to date. As with most materials, the strength of aluminum depends in large part on its microstructure: The smaller and more densely packed its microscopic constituents, or “precipitates,” the stronger the alloy would be.

With this in mind, the class used computer simulations to methodically combine aluminum with various types and concentrations of elements, to simulate and predict the resulting alloy’s strength. However, the exercise failed to produce a stronger result. At the end of the class, Taheri-Mousavi wondered: Could machine learning do better?

“At some point, there are a lot of things that contribute nonlinearly to a material’s properties, and you are lost,” Taheri-Mousavi says. “With machine-learning tools, they can point you to where you need to focus, and tell you for example, these two elements are controlling this feature. It lets you explore the design space more efficiently.”

Layer by layer

In the new study, Taheri-Mousavi continued where Olson’s class left off, this time looking to identify a stronger recipe for aluminum alloy. This time, she used machine-learning techniques designed to efficiently comb through data such as the properties of elements, to identify key connections and correlations that should lead to a more desirable outcome or product.

She found that, using just 40 compositions mixing aluminum with different elements, their machine-learning approach quickly homed in on a recipe for an aluminum alloy with higher volume fraction of small precipitates, and therefore higher strength, than what the previous studies identified. The alloy’s strength was even higher than what they could identify after simulating over 1 million possibilities without using machine learning.

To physically produce this new strong, small-precipitate alloy, the team realized 3D printing would be the way to go instead of traditional metal casting, in which molten liquid aluminum is poured into a mold and is left to cool and harden. The longer this cooling time is, the more likely the individual precipitate is to grow.

The researchers showed that 3D printing, broadly also known as additive manufacturing, can be a faster way to cool and solidify the aluminum alloy. Specifically, they considered laser bed powder fusion (LBPF) — a technique by which a powder is deposited, layer by layer, on a surface in a desired pattern and then quickly melted by a laser that traces over the pattern. The melted pattern is thin enough that it solidfies quickly before another layer is deposited and similarly “printed.” The team found that LBPF’s inherently rapid cooling and solidification enabled the small-precipitate, high-strength aluminum alloy that their machine learning method predicted.

“Sometimes we have to think about how to get a material to be compatible with 3D printing,” says study co-author John Hart. “Here, 3D printing opens a new door because of the unique characteristics of the process — particularly, the fast cooling rate. Very rapid freezing of the alloy after it’s melted by the laser creates this special set of properties.”

Putting their idea into practice, the researchers ordered a formulation of printable powder, based on their new aluminum alloy recipe. They sent the powder — a mix of aluminum and five other elements — to collaborators in Germany, who printed small samples of the alloy using their in-house LPBF system. The samples were then sent to MIT where the team ran multiple tests to measure the alloy’s strength and image the samples’ microstructure.

Their results confirmed the predictions made by their initial machine learning search: The printed alloy was five times stronger than a casted counterpart and 50 percent stronger than alloys designed using conventional simulations without machine learning. The new alloy’s microstructure also consisted of a higher volume fraction of small precipitates, and was stable at high temperatures of up to 400 degrees Celsius — a very high temperature for aluminum alloys.

The researchers are applying similar machine-learning techniques to further optimize other properties of the alloy.

“Our methodology opens new doors for anyone who wants to do 3D printing alloy design,” Taheri-Mousavi says. “My dream is that one day, passengers looking out their airplane window will see fan blades of engines made from our aluminum alloys.”

This work was carried out, in part, using MIT.nano’s characterization facilities.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Education; Military/Veterans; Science
KEYWORDS: 3dprinter; alloy; aviation; metal
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1 posted on 10/15/2025 5:12:11 AM PDT by Red Badger
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To: 04-Bravo; 1FASTGLOCK45; 1stFreedom; 2ndDivisionVet; 2sheds; 60Gunner; 6AL-4V; A.A. Cunningham; ...

Aviation Ping!..................


2 posted on 10/15/2025 5:13:31 AM PDT by Red Badger (Homeless veterans camp in the streets while illegals are put up in 5 Star hotels....................)
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To: MtnClimber; SunkenCiv; rktman; mowowie; SuperLuminal; Cottonbay; telescope115; laplata; ...

Ping!................


3 posted on 10/15/2025 5:14:16 AM PDT by Red Badger (Homeless veterans camp in the streets while illegals are put up in 5 Star hotels....................)
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To: Red Badger

But but what about that new wood developed by Professor Hu at Yale?


4 posted on 10/15/2025 5:34:32 AM PDT by DAC21
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To: DAC21

Yellow wood?..............


5 posted on 10/15/2025 5:38:43 AM PDT by Red Badger (Homeless veterans camp in the streets while illegals are put up in 5 Star hotels....................)
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To: Red Badger
This is a huge advancement because the mechanical properties of additive manufactured components have traditionally been lower than that of parts made using traditional methods.

To have a process that combines the manufacturability advantages of 3D printing additive manufacturing and an end product with a high quality, high strength end material is revolutionary.

6 posted on 10/15/2025 5:38:56 AM PDT by rdcbn1 (..when poets buy guns, tourist season is over................Walter R. Mead.l)
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To: Red Badger

I may have missed it but what are the alloy elements?


7 posted on 10/15/2025 6:12:25 AM PDT by sasquatch (Do NOT forget Ashli Babbit! c/o piytar)
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To: Red Badger

MIT engineers developed a way to 3D print alloys that are much stronger than conventionally manufactured versions.”

Once again proves MIT should focus on science and skip the protests.


8 posted on 10/15/2025 6:15:02 AM PDT by antidemoncrat
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To: sasquatch; Red Badger

It’s in the abstract:

https://advanced.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/adma.202509507


9 posted on 10/15/2025 6:19:03 AM PDT by sasquatch (Do NOT forget Ashli Babbit! c/o piytar)
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To: Red Badger

One would think the arrangement of these alloys could be organized by FEA according to how the part is to be stressed. That would reduce the magnitude of deformation and cold working, thus taking the part long past its traditional fatigue limit.


10 posted on 10/15/2025 6:19:29 AM PDT by Carry_Okie (The tree of liberty needs a rope.)
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To: Carry_Okie

11 posted on 10/15/2025 6:22:10 AM PDT by Red Badger (Homeless veterans camp in the streets while illegals are put up in 5 Star hotels....................)
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To: Red Badger

The ability to arrange the crystal structure in a part according to how it will be used is an amazing tool. I’d bet they will be able to organize surface finishes too.

Composite structures are great, but reusing those materials may be difficult at end of life. One wonders about recyclability.


12 posted on 10/15/2025 6:26:55 AM PDT by Carry_Okie (The tree of liberty needs a rope.)
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To: Carry_Okie

I wonder if they tried non-metallic elements and not just metallic ones?.......


13 posted on 10/15/2025 6:32:27 AM PDT by Red Badger (Homeless veterans camp in the streets while illegals are put up in 5 Star hotels....................)
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To: Red Badger

transparent aluminum? I saw a star trek movie about that


14 posted on 10/15/2025 6:35:17 AM PDT by cableguymn (Can't cancel all of us)
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To: Red Badger

Bkmk


15 posted on 10/15/2025 6:42:48 AM PDT by sauropod
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To: Red Badger; sasquatch
I wonder if they tried non-metallic elements and not just metallic ones?.......

Think of concrete with aggregate in it with a twist. To build and organize stresses in the crystal lattice, thus increasing the hardness and potentially toughness of the material. If it can diffuse organized stresses, stress concentrations are thus inhibited and the chance of cracking reduced.

But again, how do you separate those constituents to recycle it? It's not a small matter with aluminum because of the energy cost in its initial refinement and the prospect for landfills, never mind the mining, trucking and energy costs in producing the soup for the initial process. I suppose one could crunch up the material at end of life and use it as an aggregate. Ultra-light concrete!

16 posted on 10/15/2025 6:43:35 AM PDT by Carry_Okie (The tree of liberty needs a rope.)
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To: Carry_Okie

They would have to do it like they do plastics of all different kinds.

Separate it into the different alloys then melt down and recycle..................


17 posted on 10/15/2025 6:46:47 AM PDT by Red Badger (Homeless veterans camp in the streets while illegals are put up in 5 Star hotels....................)
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To: Red Badger
"Separate" in this case sounds expensive.

BTW, we should be simply burning plastics for electrical generation. The Germans have done it for over a decade. It's time to stop polluting the Pacific Ocean with it.

18 posted on 10/15/2025 6:50:49 AM PDT by Carry_Okie (The tree of liberty needs a rope.)
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To: Carry_Okie

Looked at this company for (relatively) light weight stages for step/repeat cameras.

https://ergaerospace.com/metal-foam-material/


19 posted on 10/15/2025 6:58:01 AM PDT by sasquatch (Do NOT forget Ashli Babbit! c/o piytar)
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To: Red Badger

Good, now we can make better printable firearms.


20 posted on 10/15/2025 7:17:11 AM PDT by Ancesthntr ("The right to buy weapons is the right to be free." The Weapons Shops of Isher)
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