NASA’s Super Alloy: A Breakthrough in 3D Printing Technology

NASA 3D-Printed Superalloy

NASA and The Ohio State University have developed a new superalloy that is twice as strong, more than 1,000 times more durable and twice as resistant to oxidation compared to the state-of-the-art 3D printed superalloys. The breakthrough could lead to stronger and more durable parts for airplanes and spacecraft, as the high-temperature alloy is an excellent candidate to build aerospace parts for high-temperature applications, like those inside aircraft and rocket engines, due to its ability to withstand harsher conditions before reaching its breaking point. Credit: NASA/ Jordan Salkin

NASA has developed a new superalloy called GRX-810, which is twice as strong and more than 1,000 times more durable than the state-of-the-art 3D printed superalloys. The high-temperature alloy could be used to build stronger and more durable parts for airplanes and spacecraft.

NASA has demonstrated a breakthrough in 3D printable high-temperature materials that could lead to stronger, more durable parts for airplanes and spacecraft.

A team of innovators from NASA and The Ohio State University detailed the characteristics of the new alloy, GRX-810, in a peer-reviewed paper published in the journal Nature.

“This superalloy has the potential to dramatically improve the strength and toughness of components and parts used in aviation and space exploration,” said Dr. Tim Smith of NASA’s Glenn Research Center in Cleveland, lead author of the Nature paper. Smith and his Glenn colleague Christopher Kantzos invented GRX-810. 

Smith and his team employed time-saving computer modeling, as well as a laser 3D printing process that fused metals together, layer-by-layer, to create the new alloy. They used this process to produce the NASA logo pictured above.

3D Printed Turbine Engine Combusto

This turbine engine combustor (fuel-air mixer) was 3D-printed at NASA Glenn and is one example of a challenging component that can benefit from applying the new GRX-810 alloys. Credit: NASA

GRX-810 is an oxide dispersion strengthened alloy. In other words, tiny particles containing oxygen atoms spread throughout the alloy enhance its strength. Such alloys are excellent candidates to build aerospace parts for high-temperature applications, like those inside aircraft and rocket engines, because they can withstand harsher conditions before reaching their breaking points.

Current state-of-the-art 3D printed superalloys can withstand temperatures up to 2,000 degrees Fahrenheit. Compared to those, GRX-810 is twice as strong, over 1,000 times more durable, and twice as resistant to oxidation.

“This new alloy is a major achievement,” said Dale Hopkins, deputy project manager of NASA’s Transformational Tools and Technologies project. “In the very near future, it may well be one of the most successful technology patents NASA Glenn has ever produced.”

A team of contributors from Glenn, NASA’s Ames Research Center in California’s Silicon Valley, NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama, and The Ohio State University co-authored the Nature paper.  

GRX-810 was developed under NASA’s Transformational Tools and Technologies project, with support from the agency’s Game Changing Development Program.

Reference: “A 3D printable alloy designed for extreme environments” by Timothy M. Smith, Christopher A. Kantzos, Nikolai A. Zarkevich, Bryan J. Harder, Milan Heczko, Paul R. Gradl, Aaron C. Thompson, Michael J. Mills, Timothy P. Gabb and John W. Lawson, 19 April 2023, Nature.
DOI: 10.1038/s41586-023-05893-0

7 Comments on "NASA’s Super Alloy: A Breakthrough in 3D Printing Technology"

  1. David Thomson | April 24, 2023 at 6:54 am | Reply

    Is this not a science magazine? An alloy is a combination of metals. What are the metals involved in this alloy? It seems like these articles are written for kindergarten classes.

    • I think that we can blame the NASA press release writer, overly dumbing it down. I agree it would be nice to have had the information in this article. However, one can find it in the link: “Here we develop a new oxide-dispersion-strengthened NiCoCr-based alloy …”

  2. William Readling | April 24, 2023 at 7:14 pm | Reply

    Would this be considered a precipitation hardened alloy?

  3. “If it fans out”,could be used to support Starship, less damage to launch pad at lift off.Whats it’s melting point?

  4. Well, I found it interesting. Can’t please everyone I suppose.

  5. Quote: Yes, it is interesting. The question is, “Was it as informative as it might have been?”
    Well just maybe they don’t want you copying it before they can get to use it themselves.
    Also given you ask a totally subjective question, the answer is subjectively yes.

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