Abstract
The U.S. Navy’s certification and qualification process for materials and structures is undertaken to ensure the flight safety and full mission capability of naval aviation weapon systems. A building-block process is practiced in which validated engineering data and concepts provide the foundation for continued technological development and innovation. For example, prior to developing material-property standards, the manufacturing process is frozen and fully characterized. The customer’s cost, schedule, and performance requirements must be carefully considered. Technologies are selected for immediate use or further R&D based upon a risk assessment that takes into account many factors, including technological maturity, lessons learned, the sponsor budget and schedule constraints, affordability, return on investment, and life-cycle cost impact. This paper explores the process that the navy uses to qualify its airframe alloys and structures.
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For more information, contact W.E. Frazier, Naval Air Systems Command, Research and Engineering Group, Air Vehicle Department, Patuxent River, MD 20670; (301) 342-8003; fax (301) 342-8062; e-mail FrazierWE@navair.navy.mil.
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Frazier, W.E., Polakovics, D. & Koegel, W. Qualifying of metallic materials and structures for aerospace applications. JOM 53, 16–18 (2001). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11837-001-0171-z
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s11837-001-0171-z