Innovative materials and advanced manufacturing
Our research teams analyze, design, transform, produce and test technologies involving materials that can enhance their performance, durability, cost-effectiveness and capacity for upgrading in order to produce a positive impact on the environment.
These materials are more robust, more resistant, lighter, cleaner and more recyclable, and can be to improve manufacturing-process equipment and in the manufacturing of finished products. A number of industrial sectors can benefit from these materials that are suited to sustainable development principles, especially transportation and health. Our research teams are constantly striving to develop smart materials through the use of emerging technologies.
Strategic directions in materials and manufacturing at ÉTS
At ÉTS, more than 50 researchers specialized in engineering physics, chemical engineering, materials engineering, mechanical engineering, electrical engineering and construction engineering lead materials research activities.
The main strategic directions relate to:
- Intelligent design of traditional materials based on fundamental concepts and using tools such as modelling and simulation;
- The development of new classes of materials such as graphene, quantum materials and nanocomposites;
- The development of materials for the biomedical sector;
- Optimization of traditional manufacturing processes in terms of their efficiency and respect for the environment;
- The development of new manufacturing processes such as additive manufacturing and electrospinning;
- The miniaturization of manufacturing processes (micro-manufacturing);
- Virtual manufacturing;
- 3D printing;
- The integration of materials and manufacturing processes development within the general approach to product development.
Portrait of the Materials and Manufacturing Sector in Québec
In Québec, the advanced materials and manufacturing ecosystem is relatively young and comprises mostly SMBs. Few of them, however, invest in R&D, even though the applications arising from materials and manufacturing are used in many areas including energy, aerospace and health sciences. Our strategy is therefore to work on the entire value chain, i.e. the raw materials, processing and applications, to carry out projects yielding high added value.
Although Québec is active in supplying additive manufacturing services, it’s really inactive on the equipment production side and the development of software that can support it. In addition, the aerospace sector has led SMBs to innovate to be able to offer high added value parts. The same goes for the transport sector.
Finally, among Québec companies that produce nanotechnology components, many have difficulty finding applications that can respond to immediate market needs. Projects with a higher technological maturity would be commercially successful.
Chairs and research units related to innovative materials and advanced manufacturing
- Canada Research Chair in Spatiotemporal Encryption of Terahertz Light Assisted by Computational Method
- Canada Research Chair in Printed Hybrid Optoelectronic Materials and Devices
- Canada Research Chair on Sustainable Multifunctional Construction Materials
- Canada Research Chair in Rheology of Polymer Blends and Composites
- FRQ-AdapT Research Chair
- ArianeGroup Research Chair on Emerging Materials in the Aeronautics and Space sector
- Finkl Steel Industrial Research Chair in Forming Technologies of High-Strength Alloys
- Olympus Industrial Chair on Ultrasonics Nondestructive Testing
- Marcelle-Gauvreau Engineering Research Chair in environmentally friendly composite materials
- CERIEC – Center for Intersectoral Studies and Research on the Circular Economy
- CoRo – Control and Robotics Laboratory
- DRSR – Research team specialized in Development and Research on Structures and Rehabilitation
- DYNAMO – Research Laboratory in Dynamics of Machines, Structures and Processes
- GRAM – Acoustics Research Group of Montréal
- LACIME – Communications and Microelectronic Integration Laboratory
- Water Engineering Laboratory
- LAMSI – Shape Memory Alloys and Intelligent Systems Laboratory
- LaRTIC – Laboratoire de recherche sur les technologies de l’information dans la construction
- LCMB – Pavements and Bituminous Materials Laboratory
- LIPEC – Polymer and Composite Engineering Laboratory
- LIPPS – Products, Processes, and Systems Engineering Laboratory
- LOPFA – Optimization of Aerospace Manufacturing Processes Laboratory
- POLYMERETS – Polymer Rheology and Physics Laboratory
- PULÉTS – Piezoelectricity, ULtrasonics technologies and materials Laboratory
- NUMÉRIX – Organizational Engineering Research Laboratory for the Digital Enterprise
We want new materials to be less expensive, have new properties and be less environmentally hazardous.
— Nicole Demarquette: Inventing New Materials
Given the technological possibilities, our consumption habits and economic and environmental demands, the need for new high-quality materials has never been greater. Nicole Demarquette’s job is to invent them.