Misplaced Pages

AILU

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Association of Industrial Laser Users
AbbreviationAILU
FormationNovember 1995
Founded atAbingdon, Oxfordshire, UK
TypeNon-profit Organisation
Location
  • 100 Ock Street, Abingdon, UK
Membership300+
Key peoplePresident: Ric Allott

Vice-presidents: Paola De Bono, Richard Carter

Exec. Director: Dave MacLellan

The Association of Industrial Laser Users (AILU) was established in 1995 as an independent, non-profit organisation run by and for laser users involved in activities including manufacturing, healthcare, academic and industrial research; as well as suppliers of laser-related products and services.

The association promotes many activities surrounding laser use, such as the fostering of co-operation and collaboration and the dissemination of information, experience and expertise relating to industrial laser technology, laser materials processing; its applications and related technologies.

Organisation

The organisation of AILU is under the direction of an elected standing committee made up of representatives from the UK industrial laser community. Elections are held annually at the Annual General Meeting.

AILU provides a wide range of general services to laser users and suppliers and hosts a number of special interest groups (SIGs) to better support members who have particular interests in common. These include a Job Shop SIG (established in 1995, with 86 members) for subcontract laser-based engineering companies; a Market Development SIG (established in 2005, with 240 members) for suppliers of laser-related products and services; a Medical SIG (established in 2007, with 55 members) for clinicians, manufacturers using lasers for manufacture of medical devices and suppliers of laser-related products and services; and the Micro:Nano SIG, AILU's newest, launched in mid 2008 at AILU's 10th microprocessing workshop.”

Activities

The current activities of AILU include:

AILU’s Membership

Application for membership of AILU is open to the industrial laser community worldwide. AILU currently has over 300 members, which make up (by sector) manufacturing industry including laser job shops (40%), suppliers of laser-related products and services (30%) and research and consultancy organisations (25%).

The AILU Award

The AILU award recognises those individuals who have made an outstanding contribution to the industrial use of lasers in the UK. The AILU Award is presented to an individual for significant contribution to laser materials processing and that preferably has wider benefit for the industrial laser user community.

Year Recipient(s) Outline
2015 Paul Hilton Outstanding contribution to the industrial use of lasers in the UK
2013 John Bishop Outstanding contribution to the industrial use of lasers in the UK
2011 Janet Stoyel Contribution to the application of lasers to the discipline of Textiles, Art, Media and Design
2009 Brooke Ward Pioneering work on measurement standards and optics, outstanding contribution

to the industrial use of CO2 lasers in the UK.

2008 Tim Weedon Pioneering efforts to introduce Nd:YAG-based machining systems into the UK.
2007 Malcolm Gower & Phil Rumsby In recognition of their pioneering work with Excimer laser processing.
2006 David Stroud For his outstanding contribution to the industrial use of lasers in the UK.
2005 Bill Steen AILU's first President.
2004 Denis Hall Innovator of industrial lasers and their applications.
2003 Colin Webb Entrepreneur and gas laser innovator.
2001 David Dyson Innovator in slow axial flow industrial laser design.
2000 Martin Adams, Derek Russell & Frank van Rompuy Developers of the first fast axial flow CO2 laser .
1999 Maurice Gates Entrepreneur and pioneer of lasers for fine metal cutting.
1998 Jim Wright Entrepreneur and pioneer of industrial Nd:YAG laser applications.
1997 Peter Houldcroft Inventor of oxygen assisted laser cutting.

References

This article relies excessively on references to primary sources. Please improve this article by adding secondary or tertiary sources.
Find sources: "AILU" – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (January 2023) (Learn how and when to remove this message)
Categories: