Deakin and GM partner to design cars of the future
Deakin University has partnered with General Motors to design cars of the future.
The International Centre for Innovative Manufacturing (ICIM), launched in Geelong, will be led by Deakin University and General Motors Global Research, focused on developing world-leading innovative and competitive solutions for manufacturers and suppliers into the future.
The new alliance would be set up as a formal organisation with a board and directors, said Deakin’s Deputy Vice-Chancellor Research Professor Lee Astheimer. Members will include Korean steel-maker POSCO, Korean national research laboratories including the Korea Institute for Industrial Technology and the Korea Institute for Materials Science.
Another Korean company, Sungwoo HiTech, will also be involved, along with US-based commercial software group Livermore Software Technology Corporation and global virtual prototyping company ESI Group.
Professor Astheimer said Deakin was well placed to lead the new partnership as it had already established itself at the forefront of automotive industry research.
“Deakin has been at the forefront of solutions to issues facing the automotive industry across the world, including the simultaneous reduction of cost and carbon emissions,” Professor Astheimer said.
“We already have a number of programs to address these issues in partnership with the industry and suppliers, so it is really exciting for us to be able to begin this new solution-based partnership with General Motors Global Research.”
The partnership will be driven by researchers with Deakin’s School of Engineering and Institute for Frontier Materials and include members from industry and suppliers.
The ICIM board of directors includes General Motors’ Tom Stoughton as chairman and Deakin’s Professor Jeong Yoon as chief investigator.
Professor Yoon said the centre would develop technology-driven solutions designed to ensure members produced the most innovative, competitive and capable automotive products in the world.
“The partnership is modelled on the UK’s Sheffield University Boeing Advanced Manufacturing Research Centre, which has been invited to collaborate with the new group,” Professor Yoon said.
He said the initial focus of the new centre would be to develop advanced constitutive and failure models, including calibration test procedures, before implementing the models into commercial software.
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