2011 Hagen Symposium: Celebrating the 30th anniversary of Germany’s leading PM event

December 14, 2011

The Hagen Symposium is the most important meeting for many German-speaking powder metallurgists. Located at the Eastern outskirts of the Ruhr Region in Germany, the city of Hagen once again welcomed delegates to the symposium which took place from November 24-25 at the city’s “Stadthalle”. In the first of five exclusive articles for ipmd.net, Dr Georg Schlieper provides an overview of the event and reports on the winner of the 2011 Skaupy Prize.

exhib1

exhib2 

There were around 50 exhibitors at the Hagen

Symposium this year (couretsy Georg Schlieper)

This year the Hagen symposium celebrated its 30th anniversary. Organised by Fachverband Pulvermetallurgie, the association for the PM industry in Germany and its German-speaking neighbours, the symposium attracted some 250 delegates and included an exhibition featuring around 50 companies.

The main topic of the technical sessions at this year’s symposium was “Sintering – the key process of powder metallurgy”. Further reports highlighting key presentations at the event will be published over the coming weeks on ipmd.net.

2011 Skaupy Prize

One of the many traditions associated with the Hagen Symposium is the awarding of the Skaupy Prize. This is the highest honour the German PM community has to offer and the 2011 recipient was Dr Gerhard Gille, one of the most recognised, active powder metallurgists in Germany.

gille

Herbert Danninger (President, Fachverband

Pulvermetallurgie) (left), Hans Kolaska (Fachverband

Pulvermetallurgie) and Gerhard Gille (right) with the

Skaupy honorary certificate (courtesy Fachverband) 

Dr Gille is Senior Vice President R&D of Advanced Metallic and Ceramic Powders at HC Starck Group, the manufacturer of specialty metals and alloys. In the powder metallurgy industry, HC Starck is particularly well-known as a manufacturer of powders for cemented carbides (hard-metals).

Gerhard Gille was born in 1948 in the German province of Thuringia and grew up in communist East Germany. He started his academic career at the Technical University of Dresden where he studied physics. It was there that Gille became interested in materials science, which in Dresden traditionally had a strong focus on powder metallurgy.

Gille joined the Central Institute for Solid State Physics and Materials Research (Zentralinstitut für Festkörperphysik und Werkstoffforschung – ZFW). His first years of academic research were directed at the mechanical properties and fracture mechanics of fibre reinforced composites, but soon his priorities turned towards hardmetals.

Gille investigated the high temperature behaviour and sintering of hardmetals, cermets, carbides and carbonitrides including structure development and properties. His work area also covered the properties of CVD and PVD coatings on hardmetals, ceramics and tool steels.

cake

The municipality of Hagen expressed its gratitude for

the continuing loyalty of the Fachverband by donating

a giant birthday cake. The cake was cut by Hans

Kolaska, organiser of the symposium.

In further work Gille synthesised novel carbides, carbonitrides, nitrides and borides and studied high temperature and fatigue properties of hardmetals and cermets. The development of Fe-Ni-Co binders for hardmetals and ultrafine WC-Co hardmetals was another part of his work.

After the fall of the Iron Curtain, Gille moved to HC Starck in West Germany in 1991 and joined the R&D department as a researcher. He began with the development and marketing of innovative sub-micron carbonitride powders for cermets, the development of a new process for carburising/carbonitriding of refractory metals and the promotion of traditional WC posders.

In 1994 Gille was assigned to the position of R&D Manager for the hardmetals division. From 1997 to 2009 Dr Gille was head of the Central R&D division of the entire HC Starck Group with responsibility for the worldwide R&D activities of the group. He coordinated and integrated the R&D activities of the various HC Starck locations. In 2009 Gille became Senior Vice President.

Continuous innovation in refractory metal, hardmetal and ceramic powders for high-tech appli-cations document Gilles successful career. He holds more than 15 patents and is a member of numerous scientific societies.

Gille is Chairman of the Board of Trustees of the Fraunhofer IKTS Institute in Dresden, Deputy Chairman of the Max Planck Institute FKF in Stuttgart and member of the scientific advisory board of the initiative for nano and material innovation in Lower Saxony.

“I am very proud of this distinction. It honours my life-long research together with co-workers and colleagues at HC Starck and in close cooperation with research institutions and universities. It is a motivation for more research work in this field,” stated Dr Gille after the presentation of his Skaupy Award.

 

News | Articles | Market reviews | Search directory | Subscribe to e-newsletter

 

www.ipmd.net

December 14, 2011

In our latest magazine…

Download PDF

Extensive metal powder and Powder Metallurgy news coverage, plus the following exclusive deep-dive articles and reports:

  • Soft Magnetic Composites (SMCs) for electric motors: A new era driven by automotive and aviation electrification
  • Keep your powder dry: The overlooked impact of moisture in metal powders
  • PM-HIP: The alternative to casting and forging that improves supply chain flexibility and sustainability
  • Producing copper powder from industrial waste: Destiny Copper’s sustainable recovery process
  • The 2024 Japan Powder Metallurgy Association Awards: Recognising innovations in PM

The latest news from the world of metal powders, delivered to your inbox

Don't miss any new issue of Metal Powder Technology, and get the latest industry news. Sign up to our weekly newsletter.

Sign up

Join 5,000+ other industry professionals – follow us online

Discover our magazine archive…

The free-to-access Metal Powder Technology magazine archive offers unparalleled insight into the world of metal powder from a commercial and technological perspective through:

  • Reports on visits to leading PM part manufacturers, metal powder manufacturers and industry suppliers
  • Articles on technology and application trends
  • Information on materials developments
  • Reviews of key technical presentations from the international conference circuit
  • International industry news

All past issues are available to download as free PDFs or view in your browser.

 

Browse the archive

 

Looking for PM production equipment, metal powders, R&D support and more?

Discover suppliers of these and more in our
advertisers’ index and buyer’s guide, available in the back of Metal Powder Technology magazine.

  • Powders & materials
  • Powder process, classification & analysis
  • PM products
  • Atomisers & powder production technology
  • Compaction presses, tooling & ancillaries
  • Sintering equipment & ancillaries
  • Post-processing
  • Consulting & toll sintering
View online
Share via
Copy link