Metadata
Title
Translating engineering science into product development
Category
general
UUID
eab52dfda84043adb09e8e3cdf2848ec
Source URL
https://www.lboro.ac.uk/research/spotlights/digital-engineering/
Parent URL
https://volume.lboro.ac.uk/winning-its-all-about-teamwork/index.html
Crawl Time
2026-03-18T08:11:44+00:00
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Translating engineering science into product development

Source: https://www.lboro.ac.uk/research/spotlights/digital-engineering/ Parent: https://volume.lboro.ac.uk/winning-its-all-about-teamwork/index.html

Enhancing the competitiveness and sustainability of the UK automotive and motorsport sectors

Our multi-disciplinary digital engineering research – spanning modelling and simulation, validation, and calibration methods – has delivered major cost and time savings, improved engineering processes and products, and made significant reductions in CO2 emissions in the automotive and motorsport sectors.

The strength of our relationships with our industrial partners – alongside the transfer of highly skilled researchers into senior technical leadership roles – assures the long-term impact of our research and the competitiveness and sustainability of these strategically important industries.

Our impact

Ford - enhancing performance and sustainability

Jaguar Land Rover - better and safer designs

[Play

Simulation of a deformable tyre](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=krqukVdehEY)

[Play

Simulation of a car overtaking a lorry](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aHzQ56O2cyU)

[Play

Flow field behind an SUV](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hq1Jjok0hRc)

The research

For more than 20 years, we have been translating engineering science into tools and processes that improve product development, quality and capability across the automotive industry.

In powertrains, novel mapping of the engine to the driver, and the application of regression and neuro-fuzzy models for identifying complex non-linear models has resulted in revolutionary dynamic powertrain calibration methods.

Physics-based rubber friction models and new tyre models - including on deformable terrain with both soil modelling and the tyre-soil interaction - have made it possible to model off-road driving for the first time.

New approaches, for example modal decomposition-superposition and experimental modal testing, have resulted in fundamental explanation and prediction of the relationship between tyre construction and vehicle handling dynamics.

Research in computational and experimental vehicle aerodynamics and multi-physics has explored the complex aerodynamics of turbulent and separation dominated flow-fields and the associated relationship to drag, vehicle handling, and the deposition and motion of contaminants.

### The automotive industry adds £15.3 billion to the UK economy every year

### The automotive industry accounts for 13% of the UK's total annual exports

Research funders

Development partners

Meet the experts

Professor Martin Passmore

Emeritus Professor of Automotive Aerodynamics

Dr Georgios Mavros

Reader in Vehicle Dynamics

Professor Kambiz Ebrahimi

Professor of Advanced Propulsion

Dr Byron Mason

Senior Lecturer in Powertrains

Professor Gary Page

Professor of Computational Aerodynamics

Dr Dan O’Boy

Senior Lecturer in Structural vibration

Dr Andrew Garmory

Senior Lecturer in CFD