Prior to joining the University of Birmingham in July 2024, Ed spent 6 years working as the Polymer Additive Manufacturing Technical Capability lead at the National Centre for Additive Manufacturing (NCAM) based at The Manufacturing Technology Centre (MTC). During this time, he led a team of 4 engineers and was responsible for delivering a varied portfolio of projects across multiple sectors. These projects ranged from; developing new process and methodology to advance additive manufacturing (AM) technologies through their technology readiness levels (TRLs), to identifying and proving out new, more sustainable materials for ecological applications.
Ed’s prior sustainable manufacturing research has included the development of circular economies for additive manufacturing technologies and improving resource efficiency of polymeric powders in powder bed fusion. He has previously demonstrated early proof-of-concepts for establishing a circular economy of thermoplastic composites used in Large Format Additive Manufacturing (LFAM) and is currently the technical contact for an American Society for Testing and Materials (ASTM) work item that should become a Standard guide for polymer powder reuse in 2024.
During his time at the University of Warwick, under the supervision of Professor Andrew Dove and Dr Simon Leigh, he developed novel, biodegradable and biocompatible AM materials for use in tissue engineering and drug delivery applications.