Manufacturers

Department of Defense Adds ARM Institute to Manufacturing USA

Department of Defense Adds ARM Institute to Manufacturing USA

The Advanced Robotics Manufacturing (ARM) Institute is the most recent to join the Manufacturing USA network, awarded such status by the Department of Defense (DoD). It is the eighth DoD-led institute, joining the Manufacturing USA network in its collective effort to help revitalize American manufacturing and incentivize companies to invest in new technology development in the United States.

The Manufacturing USA institute network, a program with industry, academia, and government participants, co-invests in the development of cutting edge manufacturing technologies and capabilities.

Each Manufacturing USA institute focuses on a technology area critical to future competitiveness – such as additive manufacturing, integrated photonics, or smart sensors. It currently has nine manufacturing innovation institutes established or announced, with six more planned by the end of 2017. These institutes are public-private partnerships that each have distinct technology focus but all work toward a common goal: to secure the future of manufacturing in the United States through innovation, education, and collaboration.

Among the new institutes added are RAPID and REMADE (by the Department of Energy), NIIMBL (by the Department of Commerce), ATB and ARM (by the Department of Defense).

Headquartered in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, the most recently added ARM Institute – comprised of state and local governments, industry, universities, community colleges, and non-profit organizations from across the country – contributed $173 million, to be combined with $80 million in federal funding. The substantial cost matching reflects the importance the U.S. robotics community places on this institute and its value to U.S. businesses, academia, and state and local governments. The ARM Institute, with founding industrial and academic partners around the country, will organize the current fragmented domestic capabilities in manufacturing robotics technology and better position the United States, relative to global competition.

The use of robotics is already present in manufacturing environments, but today’s robots are typically expensive, singularly purposed, challenging to reprogram, and require isolation from humans for safety. Robotics are increasingly necessary to achieve the level of precision required for defense and other industrial manufacturing needs, but the capital cost and complexity of use often limits small to mid-size manufacturers from utilizing the technology. The ARM Institute’s mission therefore is to create and then deploy robotic technology by integrating the diverse collection of industry practices and institutional knowledge across many disciplines – sensor technologies, end-effector development, software and artificial intelligence, materials science, human and machine behavior modeling, and quality assurance – to realize the promises of a robust manufacturing innovation ecosystem. Technologies ripe for significant evolution within the ARM Institute include, but are not limited to, collaborative robotics, robot control (learning, adaptation, and repurposing), dexterous manipulation, autonomous navigation and mobility, perception and sensing, and testing, verification, and validation.

The federal government has committed over $1 billion, matched by over $2 billion in non-federal investment, across the Manufacturing USA network. Together, the Manufacturing USA institutes are already enhancing U.S. competitiveness in advanced manufacturing – from helping Youngstown, Ohio attract over $90 million in new manufacturing investments and training 14,000 workers in the fundamentals of 3D printing for business to supporting companies like X-FAB in Lubbock, Texas upgrade to cost-competitive, next-generation semiconductors and sustain hundreds of jobs.

The ARM Institute, the newest addition to Manufacturing USA, includes:

123 industrial partners, including ABB Inc., ACUTRONIC, AeroCision, LLC, Aerospace Components Manufacturers, Inc., Agility Robotics, Inc., Airbus, Amazon Robotics LLC, ANSYS, Applied Dexterity, Applied Robotics, Inc., Arconic, ARCOR Laser Services, ATI Industrial Automation, Automated Dynamics, Axis, Barnes Group, Inc. (Barnes Aerospace), Bimba Manufacturing, BirdBrain Technologies LLC, Bluewater Defense, Inc., BluHaptics, BMW Manufacturing, Bridgestone Americas, Inc., CapSen Robotics, CHOMARAT, Citrine Informatics, Clearpath Robotics, Cognizant, Concept Systems, Inc., Dassault Systemes Americas Corp., Deloitte Consulting LLP, Delphi Automotive Systems, LLC, DENSO Manufacturing Tennessee, Inc., Digital Manufacturing Services, LLC, Diverse Automation, Inc., Duro UAS, Eaton, Enfield Technologies, ESCO Corporation, Euclid Automation LLC, FANUC America Corporation, FedEx Ground, Fiat Chrysler Automobiles, ficonTEC (USA) Corporation, Fortress Academy, FSI Advanced Research Inc., FuelCell Energy, GE, General Dynamics Electric Boat, General Dynamics Land Systems, General Motors, GLOBALFOUNDRIES, Guided Particle Systems Inc., Honeybee Robotics, HP, Inc., Ingersoll Machine Tools, Innotronics, Insightfil, Intelligent Automation, Inc., Interface Technologies, International Electronic Machines Corporation, Ion Pacific Limited, Jabil, John Deere, JTEKT North America Corporation, Katok Inc., Kinema System, KRTKL, Lockheed Martin Corporation, Lula Robotics Inc., Luna Innovations Incorporated, MassRobotics, Inc., MathWorks, Means Engineering, Inc., Modbot, MPI Incorporated, MTI Instruments Inc., National Fluid Power Association, National Instruments Corp., National Oilwell Varco, Inc., Near Earth Autonomy, Neya Systems, LLC, Northrop Grumman Systems Corporation, NVIDIA Corporation, Pack Flow Concepts LLC, Parker Hannifin, PCC Structurals, Inc., PEKO Precision Products Inc., PJ Dick, Polaris Industries Inc., Prendo Systems, Inc., Raytheon, RE2 Robotics, Real-Time Innovations, Inc., Rethink Robotics, RightHand Robotics, Robert Bosch LLC, Robodub, Robomatter Inc., Rockwell Automation Inc., Schlumberger Technology Corporation, Sewbo, Inc., Siemens Corporation, Sikorsky Aircraft, Silicon Valley Robotics, SimInsights, Smokie Robotics, Inc., Spirit Aerosystems Inc., Staubli Corporation, STEP Tools, Inc., Tethers Unlimited Inc., The Boston Consulting Group, The Hershey Company, The Robotics Hub, Umbra Cuscinetti, Inc., United Technologies Research Center, Vecna Technologies Inc., Vistex Composites, Wason Technology, LLC, Wearable Robotics Association, Inc., Westinghouse Electric Company, Xuare, LLC, Yaskawa America Inc. (Motoman Robotics Division), and York Exponential.

40 academic and academically affiliated partners, including Asnuntuck Community College, Auburn University, Butler County Community College, Carnegie Mellon University, Clemson University, Community College of Allegheny County, Connecticut State Colleges and Universities, Greenville Technical College, Marquette University, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Michigan State University, Northeastern University, Northwestern University, Oregon State University, Purdue University, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Rice University, Rochester Institute of Technology, Tennessee State University, Texas A&M University, University of California at Berkeley, University of Colorado-Boulder, University of Connecticut, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, University of Louisville, University of Maryland, University of Massachusetts Lowell, University of Michigan, University of South Carolina, University of Southern California, University of Texas at Dallas, University of Washington, Vanderbilt University, West Virginia University, Westmoreland County Community College, Wichita Area Technical College, Wichita State University, Worcester Polytechnic Institute, Yale University, and Youngstown State University.

64 government and nonprofit partners, including Advanced Functional Fabrics of America, Allegheny Conference on Community Development, American Society of Mechanical Engineers, California Governor’s Office of Business and Economic Development, Catalyst Connection, Clean Energy Smart Manufacturing Innovation Institute, City of Pittsburgh, Commonwealth of Massachusetts Executive Office of Housing and Economic Development, Commonwealth of Pennsylvania Department of Community and Economic Development, Connecticut Center for Advanced Technology, Inc., Connecticut Department of Economic and Community Development, CONNSTEP, County of Allegheny, Digital Manufacturing and Design Innovation Institute, Empire State Development, FIRST, FuzeHub, Institute for Advanced Composites Manufacturing Innovation, Idaho National Laboratory, IEEE GlobalSpec, Inc., Innovation Works, Innovative Manufacturing Center, International Consortium for Advanced Manufacturing Research, Los Alamos National Laboratory, Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors, Manex, MANTEC, Manufacturers Resource Center, Manufacturing Skills Standards Council, MassMEP, Michigan Manufacturing Technology Center, Mid-America Manufacturing Technology Center, National Association of Workforce Boards, National Center for Supply Chain Technology Education, National Energy Technology Laboratory, National Urban League, NCDMM, Nextflex, Northeastern Pennsylvania Industrial Resource Center, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Oregon Manufacturing Extension Partnership, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, Pittsburgh Supercomputing Center, Regional Industrial Development Corporation, Robot Garden, Sandia National Laboratories, Savannah River National Laboratory, SME, Software Engineering Institute, South Carolina Department of Commerce, South Carolina Manufacturers Alliance, South Carolina Manufacturing Extension Partnership, Southern Alliance for Advanced Vehicle Manufacturing Center, Southwest Research Institute, State of Kansas, State of Oregon, STEMconnector, The Culinary Institute of America, Three Rivers Workforce Investment Board, TMAC South Central, Urban League of Greater Pittsburgh, Wichita Manufacturer’s Association, Workforce Alliance of South Central Kansas, and York Young Manufacturers.

 

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