Materialise Earns Certification for Its Metal Additive Manufacturing Processes for Aerospace

Staff
By Staff
3 Min Read

Additive manufacturing (AM) pioneer Materialise has gained EN 9100 certification for its metal AM processes for aerospace. A sector-specific variant of ISO 9001, EN 9100 certifies that an organization has implemented a quality management system that ensures product quality, process control, regulatory compliance, and continuous improvement.

The company already holds EN 9100 for its polymer additive manufacturing processes dedicated to the sector, producing upwards of 500,000 flying parts to date for aircraft OEMs, suppliers, and MROs. The development, therefore, represents a major step forward in the adoption of metal 3D-printed parts for aviation and space.

With EN 9100 for metal now in place, Materialise’s manufacturing capabilities open up a whole host of new opportunities for part design and supply chain efficiencies for all stakeholders in the aerospace ecosystem.

A smart place to start: metal 3D printing for low-criticality parts

Materialise is no stranger to meeting stringent standards. The company is one of only a few providers of additive manufacturing processes certified to Airbus AIPI standards — recently achieving the highest possible grade on the Airbus Quality Maturity assessment. The AM-for-aviation specialist also holds a Production Organization Approval (POA) from EASA, enabling them to manufacture flight-ready parts to Form 1 accreditation.

With EN 9100 certification for metal now complementing its existing credentials, Materialise is ready to help the entire aerospace value chain identify and source flight-ready metal or polymer 3D-printed parts — with low-criticality parts a particularly strong opportunity for the sector.

Parts are made more economical, adaptable, and readily available

In an industry where production volumes are often low, 3D printing’s tooling-free technology makes small-series manufacturing considerably more affordable than conventional methods, where cost per part is much more dependent on volume.

With no ‘minimum feasible production run’ for metal 3D-printed parts, there are also no costs associated with wasted stock or warehousing of excess spare parts.

Helping new metal AM applications “take flight”

The scale of its manufacturing facilities, its status as a POA, and now the quality assurance delivered by its EN 9100-certified processes means that in addition to printing flight-ready parts, Materialise is ready to help Design Approved Organizations explore and produce new parts in line with industry standards — its processes aiding qualification requirements.

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