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Article Tekna Expands Titanium Powder Supply to U.S. Aerospace Tier-1 Supplier Image

Tekna Holding ASA has expanded its titanium powder supply into the U.S. aerospace market after securing a CAD $2.0 million order for Ti-6Al-4V powder. The company says the material will support additive manufacturing production tied to a Tier-1 supplier serving aerospace and defense customers in the United States.

Ti-6Al-4V remains the most widely used titanium alloy in aerospace due to its strength-to-weight ratio, corrosion resistance, and high-temperature performance. In additive manufacturing, the alloy is commonly used in laser powder bed fusion systems to produce lightweight brackets, structural components, housings, and parts designed for complex geometries that are difficult to machine conventionally.

The announcement highlights how titanium powder demand continues to rise as aerospace programs increase production volumes and expand qualification of additively manufactured parts. Titanium powders also play a role in reducing material waste compared with traditional subtractive machining, which can be important for cost control when working with high-value alloys.

For TechSteel readers, this development points to a broader shift in how specialty metals move through the supply chain. Aerospace manufacturers increasingly require tight powder specifications, stable chemistry, consistent particle size distribution, and repeatable flow characteristics. Those factors directly influence build quality, mechanical properties, and certification success. As more Tier-1 suppliers scale additive manufacturing for production, demand for premium titanium powder supply is expected to remain strong.

The order also reflects continued focus on U.S.-linked manufacturing and defense supply resilience. Even when powder production originates internationally, long-term contracts tied to U.S. aerospace customers can drive new capacity planning, pricing stability, and expanded availability for qualified materials.

What to watch next

Engineers and procurement teams will watch for additional supply agreements and signs that titanium powder pricing stabilizes as capacity expands. It will also be worth tracking how quickly Tier-1 aerospace suppliers increase production use of titanium AM parts beyond prototyping.

Article source: Tekna
Image source by Dinesh Kumar on Unsplash

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