ALUMINIUM 2010 Website


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Call for papers begins for the conference parallel to ALUMINIUM 2012

Januar 23rd, 2012 | By ALUMINIUM in Allgemein, ALUMINIUM Conference, Automotive, Events, Global markets | 1 Comment »

GDA Gesamtverband der Aluminiumindustrie together with Reed Exhibitions are planning and organizing the conference accompanying ALUMINIUM 2012. Under the name “Aluminium – Material for the Future” presentations are planned on the subjects of processes, transport, automotive, surface and aluminium markets.

Specialists from companies, research institutes and universities are warmly invited to submit presentations on these subjects. The submitted contributions will be examined by a programme committee, which may also permit other subject areas. The contributions will be compiled into a publication and made available.

The submission deadline for the abstracts is 23 March 2012.

More information and details on the call for papers can be found at the conference website:

http://www.aluminium-conference.de

The conference will begin each day at 9:30 a.m. and end at 4:30 p.m. Each session with its six presentations is a half day in length and will be organized in terms of its subjects so that conference visitors will have an opportunity to spend the second half of the day viewing the exhibition. The sessions can be booked individually.

Your contact for questions concerning content:
Wolfgang Heidrich

Tel: +49 211 4796-271
wolfgang.heidrich@aluinfo.de

Interview with Frank Busenbecker, CEO of Erbslöh Aluminium GmbH

Januar 16th, 2012 | By ALUMINIUM in Allgemein, Automotive, Exhibitors | 1 Comment »
Mr. Frank Busenbecker, Commercial Managing Director of Erbslöh Aluminium GmbH

Mr. Frank Busenbecker, Commercial Managing Director of Erbslöh Aluminium GmbH

Q: Please introduce yourself – who you are, what your responsibilities are at Erbslöh Aluminium GmbH?

A: My name is Frank Busenbecker and I’m the Commercial Managing Director of Erbslöh Aluminium GmbH. My colleague, Norbert-William Sucke, who is responsible for all technical affairs, and me are wholly responsible for the business success of this part of the WKW-group.

Q: Could you give us a quick overview of Erbslöh Aluminium GmbH?

A: Erbslöh Aluminium GmbH combines the competence gained in handling the sophisticated material Aluminium from the early phases of aluminium processing with modern management methods: Since its foundation in 2001, this company represents the development, production and distribution of extruded aluminium profiles for automotive and industrial applications.

Press equipment consisting of six hydraulically operated extruders with a pressing force of 12,5 MN to 44 MN meets our customers’ challenging requirements. Our product spectrum covers:

  • Semi-finished products for automotive suppliers
  • Decorative profiles for sanitary equipment and furniture accessories
  • Decorative and functional parts for consumer electronics
  • Profiles for manufacturing of heat exchangers
  • Embossed aluminum sheets

The two in-house high purity alloy melting plant, which processes e.g. ultra-pure aluminum alloys into round bars, deserves special attention. The resulting semi-finished products – in form of ALMINOX® profiles – enjoy highest reputation worldwide.

Q: Has your company always been involved in the automotive sector?

A: When it comes to combining design components with functional parts requirements, aluminum material is plainly the ideal solution. Thus, the material is used for semi-finished profiles nearly in all industrial areas. Of course, our roots lie in the automotive sector, especially for decorative moldings and roof strips, panels, window guides – even for complete greenhouse solutions -, hood components as well as roof railing systems.

Our group WKW.automotive offers the complete program – from material alloy to molding and extruding of semi-finished products all the way to mechanical processing and surface finishing. Further, highly complex extrusion processes are applied in the production of heat exchangers. Our specialties include filigree micro multiports, as well as the large volume cross-section of multiport profiles.

In the industrial design-oriented product areas of Erbslöh Aluminium GmbH, like sanitary equipment and furniture accessories, or consumer electronics, it is inconceivable to do without applications made of aluminium, often also of ALMINOX®. High functionality, together with a flawless surface appearance is an unbeatable argument in favour of our material.

Q: Looking to the future, where do you think the aluminium industry as a whole, and the automotive sector are headed?

A: Aluminium is still a young and modern metal. It has only been produced on an industrial scale since 1886, when Hall and Héroult independently discovered how to produce aluminium through electrolysis. In 1900 annual output of aluminium was one thousand tonnes. By the end of the twentieth century annual production had reached 32 million tonnes, comprising 24 million tonnes of primary aluminium and 8 million tonnes from recycled metal. This makes aluminium the world’s second most used metal, and this trend is constantly continuing.

Aluminium makes not only a key contribution to fuel-efficient engines in cars, but is an indispensable element of the design of premium automobiles. Further, by reducing the vehicles’ weight, it cuts down on fuel consumption and emissions, without compromising the size or the safety of the vehicles.

Q: What developing trend, idea or technology makes you most excited or hopeful for the future?

A: The manufacturers of vehicles and their suppliers are seeking to reduce the environmental impacts caused by transport. The aluminium industry helps to meet this challenge with its contribution to light-weighting, improved performance and to improved safety. Different life-cycle assessments have shown that 1 kg of aluminium in a car body, replacing 2 kg of steel in a conventional car body, saves, during the life-time of the car, about 20 kg of greenhouse gas emissions. Since aluminium has a high strength to weight ratio, vehicles designed to use aluminium components can achieve the benefits of light-weighting without reducing the safety of the passengers or the performance of the vehicle. For the first decade of this millennium the use of aluminium in cars is predicted to double because of more cars world-wide and more aluminium in cars.

Every time aluminium is used nowadays it is dependent on luxury strategies. As mentioned before, for automobiles this applies also to reducing the weight of the vehicle, and to the higher articulate power and aesthetic distinctiveness achieved when using aluminium for internal and external surface design.

Of course, these key factors will influence our presentation at the ALUMINUM 2012. The detailed planning of our stand, inclusive the choice which innovations will be shown there, is moving into a crucial phase in the first quarter of the year. Only so much shall betrayed: ALMINOX® will be in the center of our presentation.

For Erbslöh Aluminium GmbH the ALUMINIUM is the leading exhibition. We expect an increasing number of visitors, of course the vast majority our present and hopefully future customers.

The new Mercedes-Benz SL gets an aluminium bodyshell

November 22nd, 2011 | By ALUMINIUM in Allgemein, Automotive, Material | 3 Comments »
Mercedes-Benz announced today that the bodyshell of the new Mercedes-Benz SL will be made out of 89% aluminium! 
Cars are becoming increasingly safer, more comfortable, but often heavier as well. The new Mercedes-Benz SL not only stops this trend, it turns it around. In spite of increased comfort, performance and safety, it is 140 kilos lighter than its predecessor.
The greater part of the weight-reduction “diet” is hidden from the eyes of the observer of the SL. Under the aluminium outer skin there is a bodyshell made almost entirely from aluminium, only very few components being made from other materials. The even lighter magnesium is used in part for the rear panel. The A-pillars and the roof frame are of steel sheet metal incorporating high-strength steel tubing. For these elements steel is the best solution to provide survival space for occupants in the event of the vehicle overturning. Everything else is made of aluminium.
The bodyshell of the SL is the first all-aluminium bodyshell to be produced in large series at Mercedes-Benz. This entirely new development weighs 254 kilos and is thus 110 kilos lighter than a comparable steel bodyshell. Further extensive lightweight design features compensate the additional weight unavoidably caused by the increased comfort, the new assistance systems and other technical features. Under the bottom line an enormous weight advantage remains for the new SL. The new SL 500 weighs 125 kilograms less than its predecessor, while the SL 350 weighs the above-mentioned 140 kilos less than its previous version. And its preceding model already had lightweight aluminium bonnet and doors.
“The effect is rather as if a heavyweight-class passenger had got out of the car and taken his heavy flight luggage, too” says Dr Thomas Rudlaff, responsible for the aluminium bodyshell at Mercedes-Benz. “The result is perceptible and measurable. Less weight means more dynamism and less consumption. In other words: the motoring enjoyment increases and the environmental burden sinks.”
For the roadster the aluminium bodyshell is superior to a steel construction
The developers at Mercedes-Benz did not rest content achieving weight benefits alone. The aluminium structure had to be superior to a steel construction in terms of rigidity and comfort as well. In order to attain this high objective, developers consistently went for intelligent lightweight construction, and explored many new paths to do this. Every single component of the aluminium bodyshell was specifically optimised for its particular function and expected loads. Thus, diverse processes are used to make different kinds of aluminium depending on the use the component is to be given: the parts are made by chill casting or vacuum die casting, worked into extruded aluminium sections or into aluminium plates of thicknesses that vary within one and the same component; these are the so-called tailored welded blanks. Expressed in numbers, the bodyshell weight is made up of: 44 percent cast aluminium, 17 percent aluminium sections, 28 percent aluminium sheet metal, 8 percent steel and 3 percent of other materials.
At the Bremen production facilities the parts are assembled using diverse load-adequate joining methods, some of which are innovative processes. Secure joints are ensured for example, by MIG welding, hemming, bonding, self-piercing rivets, flow hole bolting, or friction stir welding – a joining method by which a highly resistant weld seam is produced by means of friction heat; a method particularly well-suited for aluminium on account of its low melting point.
Particular highlights of the bodyshell:
  • The Front Wall is at present the largest aluminium cast component made in large series for vehicle bodywork
  • Many sheet metal parts are designed in such a way that for the first time they can be made from 100 percent recycled aluminium, saving 80 percent of the energy used in their production.
  • The main floorpan is a 3-layer shaped panel made from thin, extrusion-moulded hollow sections, welded together by friction stir welding.
  • The longitudinal members in the vehicle front end are made using high-pressure hydroforming (IHU) technology, which enables the creation of highly complex and robust components, permitting optimum use of reduced installation spaces.
  • The door sills (longitudinal members) consist of 1.7-metre long, 7-chamber extrusion-moulded aluminium sections; these provide rigidity in the lateral sectors and safety in the event of a collision. Flexible chamber distribution makes possible a minimum component weight coupled with optimum characteristics.
  • The tunnel is made of aluminium sheet metal with a reinforcement of varying thickness (3 different thicknesses depending on sector, a so-called tailored welded blank TWB).
  • The rear sector floor is a MIG welded frame with a hollow chilled cast longitudinal member as its central element. This technique is employed in the SL for the very first time in automotive bodyshell construction.
  • The rear sector floor frame structure is closed by floor sheet metal panels and the boot tub made by vacuum die-casting.
  • The spare wheel recess is made from recycled sheet metal.
  • The central member connects the front end with the rear sector floor. The mounting points for the drive shaft, the transmission cross beam, the transmission tunnel braces and the seat bolting points on the tunnel side are all integrated into a single element. The wall thicknesses and rib distribution are oriented bionically towards the requirements and loads.
  • Many other components were optimised bionically, i.e. based on examples from nature. These structures reduce the vehicle weight compared to a classic design even further.
The sum total of all the design measures leads to a lightweight, torsionally and flexurally rigid bodyshell with an optimum rigidity/weight ratio. It was possible to increase the bodywork’s torsional rigidity by more than 20 percent over the already highly rigid preceding series. This is confirmed by measurements of the new SL’s torsional strength – at 19400 Nm per degree the roadster achieves an absolute top value (its predecessor already reached the astounding figure of 16400 Nm per degree).
Meets the highest safety standards
At the same time the high-strength structural elements of the aluminium bodyshell make the new SL even safer than the preceding model in the event of a collision. Extrusion-moulded sections, connecting cast nodes and double-thickness plate floor form a passenger compartment that is just as lightweight as it is sturdy. Two aluminium sections in each door together with the side sills (very rigid thanks to their internal chamber structure) and crash-resistant seats provide the greatest possible survival space in the event of a side-on collision.
A front end deformation zone acting on several levels and in which the aluminium front axle integral carrier is integrated as an additional third longitudinal member, distributes collision forces to a large area, conducting them past the passenger compartment. And in the rear, too, there is sufficient energy-absorbing deformation potential. A structural cage made from chilled cast longitudinal members, transversal sections and a cast magnesium tank separation bulkhead also contribute to this. This is also where the fuel tank is nested in a crash-protected manner above the rear axle. This way all the
statutory safety requirements are met as well as the even stricter ones from Mercedes-Benz.
Best marks for NVH comfort
Thanks to its innovative aluminium bodyshell concept, the new SL is also unique among the roadsters in terms of NVH comfort (noise, vibration, harshness). One contributing factor towards its optimum vibration- and top-level roll characteristics is, among other things, the extremely rigid connection between front end and vehicle rear section. This makes for relaxed travel, even on long journeys, while delivering thrilling driving dynamism at the same time.
Although aluminium features a higher sound emission and radiation level than steel, the new SL is the quietest vehicle in its class. Mercedes-Benz compensates for the acoustic disadvantages of aluminium by means of a consistent sound insulation concept with targeted adaptation of the sound damping materials to each problem zone, and through the use of innovative sound insulation materials:
  • A special firewall damping with variable mass distribution and a significant heavy layer proportion attenuates engine noise.
  • In conjunction with the plate floor, single-piece, foam-backed carpeting with virtually no seams reduces the roll noise of the vehicle in the interior.
  • A spray-on lining attenuates the structure-borne sound in the vehicle interior and exterior.
  • Textile wheelhouse linings, acoustically absorbing shield plates and bodyshell foam elements for critical sectors also contribute towards a smooth ride.
  • Damping in the rear wall transversal cross member and boot lateral elements as well as in the forced ventilation openings prevent disruptive tyre and wind noises from making themselves unpleasantly noticeable in the vehicle interior.
A further contribution to the good interior acoustics is the laminated glass windscreen with acoustic film. The transparent, highly resilient film absorbs the vibrations of the windscreen and reduces the perceptible sound level in many frequency ranges.
The doors and the bonnet, too, are lightweight
The intelligent material mix is completed by the boot lid, of SMC-hybrid design (SMC = sheet moulding compound). It consists of a single-shell synthetic material panel mounted on a steel reinforcement. Both materials have virtually identical thermal expansion coefficients and complement each other very well. The interior steel construction permits maximum rigidity with minimum use of space, while the plastic panelling allows the full integration of the aerials for navigation, digital radio and mobile telephony out of sight in the rear area so that the SL, unlike many other vehicles, does not need to carry an aerial stump on its aerodynamically refined body.
The bonnet of the SL is made from aluminium, as that of its predecessor. It was optimised in terms of form and materials, contributing towards outstanding pedestrian protection.
The doors, too, are of a lightweight design and made from aluminium. They are fashioned from a combination of sheet metal, extruded sections and cast metal parts, joined by diverse methods: riveting, bonding and hemming. Their aluminium and steel hinges are friction-based and can be opened infinitely adjustable to any desired angle, so that when getting into or out of the car they can remain securely open at any angle permitted by the space available at the side. This is particularly desirable in cramped parking conditions such as in a parking garage or on a parking lot.
Sophisticated corrosion protection concept
“The corrosion prevention measures used on the new SL are the best you can find on the market” says Dr Paul Dick, responsible for corrosion prevention at Mercedes.
The aluminium bodyshell of the new SL offers no point of attack for corrosion. A sophisticated surface protection concept ensures the preservation of the brilliant look both of the outside skin and of the underside of the sheet metal panels, thus protecting at the same time the renowned reliability and value stability of Mercedes-Benz vehicles. The protection concept was developed and tested on the basis of the environmental burden in different climate zones of the world and the specific loads the vehicle is subjected to. The foundation for maximum corrosion resistance is formed by corrosion-resistant aluminium alloys and design features, while the few steel vehicle components are all fully galvanised. High-quality zinc-nickel coatings or special electrochemical insulation measures prevent contact corrosion with aluminium. All the seams are meticulously sealed, the surfaces protected through cathodic dip priming and multiple coats of paint. Sectors particularly exposed to corrosion are additionally protected with wax, to ensure that the pristine aspect of the new car is preserved for a long time.

German aluminium industry starts into the new decade with confidence (extract from the current ALUMINIUM newsletter)

Dezember 13th, 2010 | By ALUMINIUM in Allgemein, Automotive, General, Global markets | No Comments »

As a result, 2010 brought a noticeable recovery for the German aluminium industry overall. Domestic demand stabilised, foreign demand also firmed up. The aluminium boom is primarily based on the recovery in the automotive and mechanical engineering sectors. Here order levels improved significantly since the all-time low in early 2009. The boom in the solar industry also contributed to an improvement in the utilisation of industry capacities.

There are many reasons why our industry rapidly emerged from the crisis and even increased its competitiveness in the global market. Our companies are characterised by a high degree of flexibility and creativity – qualities which were an asset in the difficult economic situation. The most important quality of our industry, however, is its high innovative potential. For many years – with the exception of 2009 – the aluminium industry has been set on a course of sound growth. Its dynamic development is closely connected to the innovative power present especially in medium-sized companies, and to the favourable qualities of the material. 

Aluminium has firmly established its position in a large number of application markets. Whether in the transportation sector as the most important market, in mechanical engineering, in electronics or in packaging: again and again, the aluminium companies drove technological development further and opened up new applications and fields of usage for this lightweight material. As a result, prognoses for aluminium remain optimistic, and the German aluminium industry starts into the new decade with confidence. Aluminium consumption worldwide will continue to increase over the next 10 to 15 years. The growing demand from Asian markets as well as the major application markets automotive, mechanical engineering, construction, packaging or solar will help the lightweight material to achieve continuous growth.

Christian Wellner

Managing Director of Gesamtverband der Aluminiumindustrie e.V. (GDA)

Mett Pty Ltd (Stand 2C09/04): Automotive components

August 18th, 2010 | By ALUMINIUM in Automotive, Exhibitors | 2 Comments »

Mett Pty Ltd is engaged in the manufacture of automotive components and is the leading aluminium high pressure and gravity die caster in Australia. The company was established in 1983 with the goal of building and maintaining a state of the art, manufacturing facility.

Today, Mett employs over 220 people at its Noble Park base in Victoria and generates a current turnover of $A71 million. The company’s plant maintains its primary die casting manufacturing capabilities whilst undertaking precision high speed CNC machining and complex automated product assemblies.

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Upward trend for aluminium foundries

August 10th, 2010 | By ALUMINIUM in Automotive, Exhibitors, Technology | 1 Comment »

It is only a year ago that the German luxury car makers – together with their suppliers, including aluminium foundries – were in the depths of their worst crisis.  Today, though, in summer 2010, the fortunes of the automotive industry have revived. The German aluminium foundries are also benefiting from the strong orders from the vehicle makers and are set to post significant growth in 2010.

One of the key factors driving the growth is the Asian market. In the first five months the Chinese automotive market has grown by more than half, while in India business has increased by almost a third. The US market is also recovering; sales of light vehicles rose by just under 17 percent in the first half of 2010.

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High-tensile aluminium alloys in automobile design

Juni 29th, 2010 | By ALUMINIUM in Automotive | 2 Comments »

The technological demands made on extruded aluminium sections by automobile manufacturers, so as to be able to ensure the required characteristics of their vehicles constantly increase and can only be fulfilled by specialists in the aluminium extruding factories.  They need to take into account the demands of their customers by developing suitable alloys, products and processes.  For example, Audi demands aluminium sections that under uniform load can be statically compressed to one third of their original length. These basic demands imply that extruded aluminium sections are becoming considerably more complex and thinner and must have higher strengths with increasing ductility and high dimensional stability.

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Lightness – an outstanding property of aluminium

April 30th, 2010 | By ALUMINIUM in Automotive, Material, Technology | No Comments »

Aluminium is strong, corrosion-resistant and lightweight. It is suitable for precision-working, is conductive and has its own aesthetic appeal. The outstanding properties of aluminium make it ideal for innovative developments and visionary product design – and help to protect the environment.

At the ALUMINIUM 2010 you will experience the full range of application possibilities for aluminium – the material of the future with unique properties which show how innovation and environment-friendliness can go hand-in-hand.

Lightness
The lightness of aluminium, its ability to combine low weight with high strength, stability and corrosion-resistance, makes it a superior material for lightweight construction.  Weight reduction lowers fuel consumption and also CO2 emissions in the car-making industry. Aluminium-based lightweight construction helps turn visions into reality in many areas.

The ALUMINIUM 2010 will be showcasing future state-of-the-art technology, demonstrating how innovation and environment-friendliness can go hand-in-hand, across all industries.

Visitors – register online now.

See you in Essen!