GRANTA Releases CES Selector 2009 for Materials Selection
CAMBRIDGE,
UK, Oct 27, 2009 - Granta Design has announced a new release of the
CES Selector software, helping engineering enterprises to make important
decisions about materials and processes during product design and
development. The latest version will be demonstrated at this week’s
Materials Science & Technology (MS&T) conference in Pittsburgh, PA, USA.
Highlights include: a quick, easy-to-use tool providing full lifecycle
audits of the environmental impact of products; new support for ‘preferred
materials’, helping to factor-in cost, regulatory, supply chain, and similar
issues when materials decisions are made; and new features for packaging and
medical device applications.

Results from an Eco Audit Tool calculation - estimated energy and carbon
dioxide emissions from a product for its full lifecycle
CES Selector combines comprehensive data on the properties of materials
with powerful graphical software for analysis and selection developed at
Cambridge University and Granta. It enables designers, engineers, and
materials experts to explore materials and process options and to make and
justify rational, auditable selection and substitution decisions. It helps
materials producers to analyze and position their products. The software is
particularly valuable in balancing competing engineering, economic, and
environmental objectives.
The 2009 release adds to the Eco Audit Tool, a practical eco design tool
first introduced last year. The Tool now accounts for energy or carbon
dioxide lost or recovered on product disposal, enabling it to calculate
these key environmental indicators for the full product lifecycle.
Unlike most tools for computing eco impact, the Eco Audit Tool is very fast
and easy to use. It has a clear, simple user interface and an in-built
database to provide supporting data. Its goal is not to replace full
lifecycle assessment, but to deliver a quick estimate that can guide
decisions during product design. It helps to answer ‘what if?’ questions,
such as “What would the different carbon footprints of my product be if I
reuse, recycle, combust, or landfill it at the end of its life?”
CES Selector’s core materials property graphing and selection tools have
also been enhanced. One significant addition is the ability to compile,
share, and apply lists of favorite materials. These could be used, for
example, to quickly highlight the performance of a company’s ‘preferred
materials’, or of materials from particular suppliers, when considering
candidate materials for a product. This can help engineers to make more
effective comparisons and to consider business criteria during design – for
example, with which materials does the company have experience? Or, which
can be purchased at favorable prices?

Materials property chart showing key mechanical and environmental properties for
100 representative materials
Trade-off between plastics for a packaging application with favored
materials highlighted
Other new features include tools to help choose materials based on their
gas or water permeability, while meeting strength and stiffness
requirements. Together with the enhanced Eco Audit Tool, this means that CES
Selector 2009 covers two key issues for the packaging industry. Enhancements
that speed up and assist materials selection for all users include improved
guidance when specifying property criteria to narrow down the range of
candidate materials.
CES Selector offers a range of supporting data modules that contain
property and processing information on tens of thousands of materials. New
price estimates are available for the 3,700 material types covered by
Granta’s comprehensive MaterialUniverse module, which provides engineering,
economic, and property data for the full range of purchasable engineering
materials. This release of MaterialUniverse also contains enhanced data on
copper alloys, steels, and hybrid and coated materials used in building and
construction.
Specialist data modules include the Medical MaterialUniverse, which has
been updated with information on 38 additional medical plastics, ensuring
excellent coverage of this class of materials. New versions of the well
known CAMPUS plastics, IDES plastics, and MMPDS aerospace alloy references
are also included.
“Last year we made major enhancements to the usability and graphical
interface of CES Selector which signaled a major step forward in its use as
a practical design tool,” says Dr Patrick Coulter, Chief Operating Officer
at Granta. “We’re very pleased to be building on these firm foundations with
new capabilities tackling issues that are of particular importance to our
industrial customers – meeting environmental objectives and minimizing cost,
while still improving product performance.”
For more information about CES Selector 2009,
click here.
About Granta
Granta Design Limited is the materials information technology expert.
Granta develops the leading software for materials information management in
engineering enterprises, and the leading teaching resource for materials
engineering education. Granta serves sectors as diverse as aerospace,
defense, energy, medical devices, automotive, motor sports, manufacture of
consumer and industrial equipment, materials production, and publishing.
Customers realize multi-million dollar benefits in reduced cost, enhanced
performance, improved quality, and speedier design. Granta was founded in
1994 as a spinout from the University of Cambridge and the work of
Professors Mike Ashby and David Cebon. For more information, visit www.grantadesign.com.
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Related News
Oct 27 - GRANTA Releases CES Selector 2009 for Materials Selection Jul 20 - GRANTA MI 3.0 Released for Materials Information Management Jan 29 - Granta Releases CES EduPack 2009 Oct 6 - Granta to Unveil CES Selector at MS&T Summit
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