An engineer at Boeing is applying her research to accelerate a shift toward a more sustainable commercial aerospace industry
It's the opportunity of a lifetime: After devoting years of research at 无码专区鈥檚 College of Engineering to investigating sustainable alternatives for aerospace materials, Alicia Piscitelli 鈥21 PhD is now on the composites team at Boeing鈥檚 state-of-the-art Seattle laboratory. Her work is already shaking up the conventional wisdom in her field.
鈥淣aysayers think it鈥檚 impossible to recycle composites, but I think there鈥檚 something they鈥檙e missing,鈥 says Alicia, who completed her doctoral degree in Sustainable Engineering in May 2021 and is continuing this work at the aerospace giant, where her research has the potential to become a reality that could transform the industry. 鈥淭he life of an airplane is about 30 years and the progression of using composites in them is relatively recent.鈥
Composed of a polymer matrix and reinforcing fibers, composite materials (fiberglass is one example) are used to build the main components of just about every commercial airliner. The problem: While composites are lighter and stronger than metal by design, many of them are not sustainable or recyclable.
Alicia is working to change that. 鈥淲e鈥檙e trying to create a sustainable supply chain for aerospace-grade polymers,鈥 she explains. 鈥淲e鈥檙e trying to source them from renewable materials so we don鈥檛 deplete natural resources that are limited on our Earth, like fossil fuels. There is still an opportunity to find a sustainable solution.鈥
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