Anew European Union-backed development and design center
established in Turkey’s Karatay University offers prototyping, validation and
testing processes for the manufacturing industry’s research and development
(R&D) projects.
Based on demand analysis studies by the university, the
Smart Technologies Design Development and Prototyping Center (STEDEC) project
in central Turkey’s Konya was conceived with the intent to overcome
manufacturers' shortcomings in producing agricultural machinery equipped with
smart technologies, project manager Barış Samim Nesimioğlu told.
"Our region remains lacking in producing agricultural
machinery equipped with smart technologies compatible with precision
agriculture developed with the use of satellite positioning data made available
to civilians in the late nineties and the agriculture 4.0 platform that started
to be discussed in the 2010s," he said.
The school's academics identified manufacturers' biggest
shortcomings in producing that type of equipment, offered solutions one-by-one
and turned the suggestions into a project, which was presented to the EU. The
EU viewed the project positively, granting the university 5 million euros (TL
51 million) in funds for the project, he said.
Touching on the center's capabilities, Nesimioğlu said:
"I can divide the core capabilities of our center into prototyping and
validation-testing. Here, I can further divide our prototyping capabilities
into two subcategories – mechanical and electronic."
The center has three-dimensional printers that can produce
both plastic and metal prints that have the same mechanical properties as the
real thing.
In terms of electronic prototyping, the center has all the
devices in the PCB (Printed Circuit Board) line and can make all electronic
printed circuits from idea to prototype.
Saying that there are only a few centers in Turkey that
perform some of these services, Nesimioğlu said there is no other center that
holistically offers all of these prototyping, testing and verification services
that may be needed in a research and development project under one roof.
"So, with this center of ours, we promise first to the
Konya region and then to all of Turkey, a center where they can receive service
at multiple interactive points with more than one coexisting component,"
he said.
Nesimioğlu stressed that the funds will be used not only to
purchase devices but also for operational activities and studies.
He said the university will also contribute to the center
with almost 1 million euro in funds and the center will interact with the
university's faculties.
"Our graduate, postgraduate and doctoral students will
be included in industrial and R&D projects and will be more
qualified," he said. "We will use our human source in every project,
and we will integrate our students and their theses into our R&D
projects."