Mississippi State celebrates grand opening of Marvin B. Dow Stitched Composites Development Center

MSU, Boeing and NASA officials cut a ribbon to celebrate the opening of the Marvin B. Dow Stitched Composites Development Center at the university’s Advanced Composites Institute. Pictured, from left, are ACI Manager Tonia Lane, MSU Vice President for Research and Economic Development David Shaw, MSU President Mark E. Keenum, Raspet Flight Research Laboratory Director Dallas Brooks, Boeing Research & Technology Aeromechanics Technology Vice President Steve Yahata, NASA Langley Research Center Director David Bowles and ACI Director Dennis Smith. (Photo by Logan Kirkland)

Contact: James Carskadon

Dennis Smith, director of the MSU Advanced Composites Institute, presents a plaque honoring pioneering NASA scientist Marvin B. Dow to Marvin’s daughter, Heather, during the grand opening of the Marvin B. Dow Stitched Composites Development Center. (Photo

STARKVILLE, Miss.—Mississippi State University celebrated Friday [April 12] the grand opening of a new research center that will continue to move the fields of composite materials and aerospace forward.

MSU hosted a grand opening ceremony for the Marvin B. Dow Stitched Composites Development Center at the MSU Advanced Composites Institute. During Friday’s ceremony, MSU President Mark E. Keenum noted that the university’s research and development activities, often carried out with government and industry partners, have a substantial impact on Mississippi’s economy, leading to the development of new companies and new jobs.

“Today, we’re celebrating the benefits of university and industry partnerships,” Keenum said.

Boeing, the world’s largest aerospace company, selected MSU to create a stitched, resin-infused composites lab that will advance the development of composite structures technology.  Through an agreement with the university, Boeing donated lab equipment and provided MSU researchers with additional resources to support the Advanced Composites Institute.

“This center matches so well for the vision that we have for the university in terms of strategic partnerships,” said MSU Vice President for Research and Economic Development David Shaw. “Our best days for collaboration are definitely in our future, rather than in the rearview mirror.”

The center is named after pioneering NASA scientist Marvin B. Dow. While working at NASA Langley Research Center, Dow worked with McDonnell Douglas, which is now part of The Boeing Company, to develop advanced stitched composite designs and manufacturing methods. On Friday, MSU presented Dow’s daughter, Heather, with a plaque recognizing Marvin’s rich legacy in the field and his original vision to conduct stitched composites research that will revolutionize the way future aircraft are designed, built and flown.

“Marvin Dow’s ideas have been a game-changer,” said David E. Bowles, director of the NASA Langley Research Center in Hampton, Virginia. “When you look at composites today, they really have transformed the aerospace industry.”

Housed at MSU’s Raspet Flight Research Laboratory in Starkville, the Advanced Composites Institute continues the land-grant university’s legacy of innovation in aerospace and materials research and development. ACI is led by director Dennis Smith, head of the MSU Department of Chemistry. With a focus on applied inter-disciplinary research, the center has affiliated faculty members with expertise in chemistry and chemical, mechanical and aerospace engineering. The collaborative environment provides distinct opportunities for graduate and undergraduate students, and enables MSU to work with partners in government and industry to develop new knowledge in composites research and solve complex problems.

The Advanced Composites Institute is a member of the Federal Aviation Administration’s Joint Advanced Materials and Structures (JAMS) Center of Excellence. The center works to maintain a global leadership position in the field of composite materials science, engineering and manufacturing—including resin chemistry and infusion and stitched composites, followed by high temperature cure of large parts in ACI’s new state-of-the-art oven, which measures 50 feet by 20 feet by 10 feet. ACI supports economic development by boosting collaboration, technology transfer and entrepreneurship, in addition to serving as a workforce development and training center for strategic partners and suppliers.

“It’s an honor to have Mississippi State as part of our JAMS Center of Excellence, and we look forward to building on our relationship in the future,” said Ken Knopp, FAA manager of structures and propulsion research.

Raspet Flight Research Lab has served as an incubation space for multiple composite manufacturers that now have permanent Mississippi homes. The lab has served as an incubator for Mississippi-based manufacturing operations of several aerospace companies, including GE Aviation, Airbus Helicopters, Stark Aerospace and Aurora Flight Sciences, a Boeing Company.

For more on the Marvin B. Dow Stitched Composites Development Center, visit www.aci.msstate.edu.

MSU is Mississippi’s leading university, available online at www.msstate.edu.