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CSIRO, the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation, is Australia's national science agency and one of the largest and most diverse research agencies in the world.

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The blades of a jet turbine engine.

The blades of a jet turbine engine.

Creating a titanium processing and manufacturing industry for Australia

The Future Manufacturing Flagship is taking titanium technologies from ore to more, building on Australia's world-ranking reserves of ilmenite, with our portfolio of advanced metal powder production and fabrication technologies.

  • 29 April 2011 | Updated 1 May 2012

Overview

Page 1 of 4

Titanium is very attractive material to use in a wide variety of applications, because it:

  • has a high strength to weight ratio (it is as strong as steel but about half the weight)
  • is highly resistant to corrosion, fatigue and cracking
  • has high-temperature capability (can cope with extremes of temperature such as those experienced by spacecraft)
  • is compatible with carbon fibre composites and the human body. 

Traditionally, titanium has been used exclusively in high end markets such as aerospace where its superior performance is considered worth the cost of production.

Use of titanium is growing with increased use of composites in aerospace structures but the market could be broader still if the cost could be brought down.

Why is titanium expensive?

Titanium is not an exotic material.  It is the ninth most abundant element in the earth’s crust.  However, titanium articles cost a lot because:

  • current processing methods require large energy inputs to produce a high-quality ingot of titanium alloy
  • ingots are intensively re-worked, requiring significant amounts of time, labour and with large wastage of material, to produce a final article.

CSIRO researchers are trying to overcome this with:

  • novel, low-energy production methods for titanium metal and alloys
  • efficient conversion of metal powders to metal sheet, plate and wire
  • low-energy, rapid manufacturing technologies.

Research areas

Titanium powder

CSIRO scientists are developing a novel, high-efficiency process for making titanium metal with the aim of paving the way for a revolution in titanium metal production and fabrication.

Dr Jawad Haidar shines a light on the grey powder caught in a flask at the business end of his plant.

CSIRO's patented technology has the potential to reduce the cost of these powder alloys by 90 per cent.

Titanium powder, rods and sheets

Light Metals Flagship researchers are developing technology to produce continuous titanium sheets from titanium powder. This technology has the potential to expand titanium use into domestic and industrial products.

A robotic arm device with two men looking on from behind.

Cold gas-dynamic spray technology, or Cold Spray technology, is a rapidly emerging industrial coatings technology.

Find out more about the Future Manufacturing Flagship.

Fast facts

  • Titanium is strong, light, and resistant to corrosion, fatigue and cracking
  • Titanium products are expensive because of the multi-step, energy intensive nature of traditional production methods
  • Titanium products would be attractive in a variety of markets if the manufacturing costs were lower
  • The Future Manufacturing Flagship aims to expand Australia's titanium processing industry via energy-efficient, advanced powder production and fabrication technologies

Contact Information

Mr John Barnes (BSc MSc)

Titanium Theme Leader

Phone: 61 3 9545 8310

Alt Phone: 61 4 6771 0595

Email: John.Barnes@csiro.au

Ms Nola Wilkinson (BSc(Hons) GradDipMkt)

Communications Manager

Phone: 61 3 9545 8744

Email: Nola.Wilkinson@csiro.au

Location

Future Manufacturing Flagship - Clayton

Gate 5 Normanby Road

Clayton NA VIC 3168

Australia

Explore CSIRO

Community

CSIRO aims to establish and build relationships with members of the community. We welcome people of all ages to come and explore our facilities, holiday programs and public events.

Contact

Phone:

1300 363 400

Email:

enquiries@csiro.au

More contact options

About CSIRO

CSIRO, the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation, is Australia's national science agency and one of the largest and most diverse research agencies in the world.