Engineering students win global additive manufacturing competition

Posted on: 17 August 2022

Brothers Tadhg-Lorcan and Eoin H. Oude Essink won the nTopology Responsible Part Challenge 2022 while representing Trinity College Dublin and TU Dublin in the competitive international event.

Tadhg is a junior sophister Mechanical & Manufacturing Engineering student at Trinity and Eoin is a PhD student at TU Dublin, where he is co-supervised by Dr Sajad Alimohammadi (TU Dublin), Dr Tim Persoons (Trinity) and Xiangjie Chen from Loughborough University.

The pair were successful with their additively manufactured aluminium heatsink – an innovation developed to address a real-world engineering problem. Their design had to cool an asymmetric heat load, while considering limiting factors such as size constraints, material, and manufacturability.

Tadhg and Eoin with their innovative design.

Tadhg and Eoin with their innovative heatsink design.

All projects were evaluated by a judging panel consisting of industry experts from nTopology, EOS, and Lockheed Martin, and the brothers’ design was first choice, based on level of innovation, use of nTopology software, potential impact, and manufacturability. 

Dr Tim Persoons, Trinity’s School of Engineering, said:

“Additive manufacturing is a relatively new manufacturing process but it is becoming more prominent in the automotive, aerospace, and medical sectors. The technology enables previously impossible designs, which results in new creative designs further maximising performance engineering solutions.

“The heatsink solution Tadhg and Eoin created provides an excellent example and we are very proud of their success in a global competition.”

Eoin, who graduated from Trinity’s School of Engineering with a Masters in 2019,  travelled to San Diego to represent the team at ITherm – an international conference during which large multinationals such as IBM, Intel, and Microsoft come together with researchers to discuss the latest developments in cooling technologies for electronics.

Tadhg has been part of the Formula Trinity team (see this article for a recent feature), where for the past 12 months, he has been the Head of Engineering. Next year he will take part in the Unitech International Programme, which involves an academic exchange at RWTH Aachen and an industrial placement with a Unitech Corporate partner.

The team thanks Mark Hartnett from Irish Manufacturing Research for his advice and guidance on the projects.

Media Contact:

Thomas Deane | Media Relations | deaneth@tcd.ie | +353 1 896 4685