Los Angeles Times

CUTTING-EDGE FACTORY FOR ANY SIZE FIRM

New USC Center for Advanced Manufactur­ing aims to build better things with devices, including 3-D printers, and create jobs

- By Ronald D. White

Layer by metal layer, a complex component began to take shape with the help of an additive manufactur­ing machine — known as a 3-D printer to most people — and a clutch of USC engineerin­g students at the region’s newest center devoted to building better stuff and creating jobs.

The part was being made for a Southern California company that was trying out an improved design but didn’t have the machinery to produce something involving complicate­d shapes and angles.

“We looked at the geometry and said ‘we should be able to,’ and we printed it for them,” said Satyandra K. Gupta, a USC professor and director of the Center for Advanced Manufactur­ing.

The collaborat­ion with the company, which had asked Gupta for complete secrecy to avoid tipping off competitor­s, was one of the first for the Center for Advanced Manufactur­ing.

The facility opened in February as part of a $253million Defense Department-sponsored consortium of dozens of corporatio­ns, schools, nonprofits and local government­s around the country.

The Defense Department initiative aims to revitalize U.S. manufactur­ing by

making robotics, 3-D printers and other advanced devices — plus a workforce trained to operate them — available to small and midsized businesses that have been slow to embrace such innovation. The idea is to bolster research, spur business investment, create jobs and boost worker productivi­ty.

The initiative, in turn, is part of Manufactur­ing USA, the federal government’s 5year-old effort to build a national manufactur­ing research infrastruc­ture that will develop new products and markets and help reduce the shortage of technicall­y trained manufactur­ing workers.

U.S. manufactur­ers have added 800,000 jobs since the recession ended in 2009, reaching 12.3 million jobs in March. But that still lags behind the 13.7 million manufactur­ing jobs in December 2007, as the recession was starting.

At the USC center, aerospace and biomedical industries will be getting particular attention to “help support the fast-growing technologi­cal ecosystem in Silicon Beach,” said Yannis C. Yortsos, dean of the Viterbi School of Engineerin­g, which houses the manufactur­ing facility.

The center has access to USC faculty with expertise beyond advanced manufactur­ing technology to include augmented and virtual reality, machine learning and the continuing evolution of Internet-connected devices. Gupta speaks of a golden age of data and technology­enhanced manufactur­ing in which the U.S. doesn’t have a disadvanta­ge because labor costs are lower in many foreign countries.

“We just don’t do things here because they are interestin­g,” Gupta said. “There should be a practical applicatio­n. Is this something a business can use? If the answer is yes, that makes it worth doing.”

The center has been funded by the Defense Department, the National Science Foundation and National Institute of Standards and Technologi­es. USC is contributi­ng faculty, equipment and space, and Jabil Circuit Inc. donated five robots. Companies will be charged for their projects.

On most days, the center is a busy place. In one part of the 6,000-square-foot center, 3-D printers are making parts from metal powder and other materials. Students are trained in the printers’ programmin­g, operation and maintenanc­e.

Industrial robots dominate another section of the lab. One is being taught to polish all the nooks and crannies of a geometrica­lly complex part.

“We’re basically building a smart assistant,” said Brual Shah, a 27-year-old native of Mumbai, India, who is a post doctoral research associate.

Northrop Grumman Corp. is among the companies involved with the Defense Department initiative and the USC center.

The reason: “We want to be able to share — lessons learned, best practices,” said Frank Flores, vice president of engineerin­g product developmen­t at Northrop Grumman Aerospace Systems, which is based in Redondo Beach. “We want to learn from each other.”

At the other end of the size spectrum is Morf3D, a 2year-old El Segundo startup that built an engine mount for the SpaceIL project, one of the five finalist entries in the Google Lunar XPrize competitio­n, which will award $20 million to the first team landing a privately funded rover on the moon.

During a recent visit to the manufactur­ing center, Morf3D Chief Technology Officer Melissa Orme said she and Chief Executive Ivan J. Madera want to develop lighter and stronger metal alloys with USC’s help. They’re also looking for future employees.

“We see the usefulness in the students, having a workforce that’s trained in additive manufactur­ing,” Orme said. “So that will be a really nice pipeline for us.”

Among those students are Jordi Sim and Cady Gooding, who were at the USC center working on a drone called Robo Raven, which flaps its mylar-andcarbon-fiber wings as a bird would. The drone is meant to help farmers reduce crop losses.

“Pest birds are the problem,” said Sim, an aerospace and computer engineerin­g student. “They tried scarecrows. Nothing was as good as a falconer with his bird, but that cost a couple of hundred dollars a day.”

Gooding figures the project, which has a wing span of 3 feet, is not only practical, it’s helping with her goal of working in commercial aerospace.

“I’ve been working a lot on the wing fabricatio­n,” she said. “It’s hands-on experience actually building it and seeing how different factors affect how well it flies.”

Peter Zierhut, vice president of the Haas Technical Education Center for Haas Automation Inc. in Oxnard, said that the developmen­t of another university-led center on manufactur­ing is “good to see, especially in California where manufactur­ing I don't think has gotten its due attention.”

Hass Automation bills itself as “the largest machine tool builder in the Western world,” and a look at its outdoor lot, which is larger than a football field, shows products bound for locations all over the globe.

Zierhut hopes that the USC manufactur­ing center will help dispel the old image of manufactur­ing as a dirty, environmen­tally unfriendly business and will help prepare the next generation of modern manufactur­ing workers.

“I think a lot of people still have visions of the factories maybe their grandparen­ts might have worked at with the smokestack­s, and the dirty smoky air, and the dirty floors, and the noisy factory. It’s not like that anymore,” Zierhut said.

“We’ve made some headway in changing that image,” he said. “Hopefully USC can help us continue working on that.”

‘I think a lot of people still have visions of the factories ... with ... dirty floors, and the noisy factory. It’s not like that anymore.’ — Peter Zierhut, Haas Automation Inc.

 ?? Ricardo DeAratanha Los Angeles Times ?? USC STUDENTS Cady Gooding, left, and Jordi Sim work on a drone at the manufactur­ing center. Their drone flaps its mylar and carbon-fiber wings to help farmers reduce crop losses from birds.
Ricardo DeAratanha Los Angeles Times USC STUDENTS Cady Gooding, left, and Jordi Sim work on a drone at the manufactur­ing center. Their drone flaps its mylar and carbon-fiber wings to help farmers reduce crop losses from birds.
 ?? Ricardo DeAratanha Los Angeles Times ?? AN INDUSTRIAL robot named Baxter, produced by Rethink Robotics, stands ready to work at the new USC manufactur­ing center.
Ricardo DeAratanha Los Angeles Times AN INDUSTRIAL robot named Baxter, produced by Rethink Robotics, stands ready to work at the new USC manufactur­ing center.
 ?? Glenn Koenig Los Angeles Times ?? MORF3D, which built an engine mount for a Google Lunar X-Prize finalist, wants the center to help it develop lighter and stronger alloys.
Glenn Koenig Los Angeles Times MORF3D, which built an engine mount for a Google Lunar X-Prize finalist, wants the center to help it develop lighter and stronger alloys.
 ?? Glenn Koenig Los Angeles Times ?? PROJECT MANAGER Jose Fuentes operates a metal 3-D printer at Morf3D, a 2year-old company in El Segundo.
Glenn Koenig Los Angeles Times PROJECT MANAGER Jose Fuentes operates a metal 3-D printer at Morf3D, a 2year-old company in El Segundo.
 ?? Ricardo DeAratanha Los Angeles Times ?? AT THE USC manufactur­ing center, which has access to USC faculty, companies are charged for their projects. Above, USC postgradua­te student Michelle Camacho works on creating a three-finger gripper.
Ricardo DeAratanha Los Angeles Times AT THE USC manufactur­ing center, which has access to USC faculty, companies are charged for their projects. Above, USC postgradua­te student Michelle Camacho works on creating a three-finger gripper.

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