
Meet some of the many technical experts at Boeing who are making the impossible possible.
Building for disruption
Fatmata Barrie (right), a Boeing metals and ceramics engineer, seeks ways to use additive manufacturing to produce structurally critical commercial-jetliner parts through robust, repeatable processes that can earn Federal Aviation Administration certification.
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Other People stories
Q&A with Phil Freeman, a Boeing Senior Technical Fellow in automation research
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IQ’s content includes articles from the Boeing Technical Journal, a peer-reviewed periodical for Boeing subject-matter-experts to capture and leverage knowledge. Research coverage includes all manner of commercial and defense product development, as well as products and services spanning land and sea, to air and space, and through cyberspace.
While the expansive BTJ archive remains exclusive to Boeing employees, IQ offers selected articles to all readers; these articles are indicated with a “BTJ” heading.
Built To Innovate
Boeing's advanced manufacturing innovations make up a fascinating and underappreciated story about the company, says Dr. Greg Hyslop (right), Boeing chief technology officer.
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Other Thought Leadership Columns
3D Printing Done Right, by Richard Aston, Boeing Senior Technical Fellow
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The Creative Destruction Lab, a seed-stage accelerator at the University of Toronto, has launched a program to harness the nascent power of quantum computing for artificial intelligence applications.
See utoronto.ca
Researchers studying cosmic rays as part of the Pierre Auger Collaboration have determined that these rare, high-energy particles originate outside the Milky Way galaxy.
See auger.org
The KRISTINA Project is developing a translation application with human-like multimodal communications capabilities including culture-specific facial expression and gesture generation and analysis. A prototype is currently being evaluated.
See kristina-project.eu
The government of Tanzania will begin using drones for just-in-time delivery of emergency and life-saving medical supplies to public health facilities across the country. The company Zipline, which owns and operates the drones, has been providing emergency blood deliveries to transfusion clinics in Rwanda since October 2016.
See flyzipline.com
An agricultural “city” comprising 50,000 smart greenhouses, seawater desalination and solar power plants, and other agriculturally focused technical projects is being built in Egypt as part of a $10 billion cooperative protocol of the country and the Korea-Arab Society.
See eng.korea-arab.org
New active thermography inspection of fiber-composite material aircraft components may be faster and more accurate than traditional ultrasonic approach. Developed by FACC, in partnership with Upper Austria University of Applied Sciences and the Higher Technical School, Andorf, the method detects component defects by measuring thermal waves.
See facc.com
Researchers at Imperial College, London, have developed a tunable nanoparticle filter that can switch between a mirror and a window.
See imperial.ac.uk
Innovation Quarterly is a publication by and for the community of technical professionals at Boeing worldwide. Expected release of each edition is February, May, August and November. Comments and letters are invited by email and may be published in subsequent editions. Submissions are subject to editing; no more than 90 words will be published. To submit a letter to the editor, email candace.k.barron@boeing.com.
On the cover: Fatmata Barrie is a metals and ceramics engineer based in Oak Ridge, Tenn.
Publisher: Greg Hyslop | Associate Publisher: Peter Hoffman
Website: Junu Kim | Conan Kisor