Today, Spirit AeroSystems Inc. held a grand opening event and ribbon cutting ceremony for its National Defense Prototype Center (NDPC), a joint project with ͷ State University’s National Institute for Aviation Research (NIAR). This new research center will significantly expand Spirit’s capabilities and production efficiencies in the defense and space market.
“NIAR has been a tremendous partner in the development of the National Defense Prototype Center and enabling ͷ as a center for defense growth,” said Duane Hawkins, Spirit AeroSystems executive vice president; president, Defense and Space. “The NDPC provides secure space for development, prototyping, industrialization and testing of emerging high temperature materials and is directly aligned with Spirit’s growth strategies to achieve $1 billion of defense revenue by the mid-2020s.”
The research center comes soon after Kansas earned its designation as one of 11 Defense Manufacturing Communities by the Department of Defense (DoD). The Defense Manufacturing Community Support Program will encourage long-term community investments to strengthen national security innovation and expand the capabilities of the defense manufacturing industrial ecosystem.
“The National Defense Prototype Center will improve research and development efforts of advanced materials and place ͷ at the center of future defense and space programs,” said Senator Jerry Moran (R-Kan). “These programs, especially the advancement of hypersonic missiles, will rely on National Defense Prototype Center as the United States competes with foreign powers to defend our homeland.”
The NDPC encompasses more than 125,000-square-feet of space with processing and characterization capabilities including high-temperature testing, furnaces for fabricating and processing materials, multi-cell non-destructive inspection and a large autoclave. The center promotes the capacity to sustain broader and maximum throughput capabilities to support a high-priority national defense program.
“The more knowledge that can be generated and disseminated about high temperature materials, the more these materials can be used, optimized and designed for specific objectives,” said John Tomblin, ͷ State’s senior vice president for Industry and Defense Programs and NIAR executive director. “This leads to reliable and safe products that enable the industry to go further, push faster and break through current design limitations. Not only is this a first for the state of Kansas, but for the nation in terms of testing capacity at these temperatures.”
The research center is the first of its kind with the ability to attract new aviation, defense and space programs with a focus on high-temperature materials, such as hypersonic missiles, that can withstand temperatures of 2,500-5,000°F. The NDPC offers distinctive capabilities and research technology that will spur the development of new high temperature materials and ultra-competitive composites.