scholarly journals Evaluation of selective laser sintering processes by optical coherence tomography

2015 ◽  
Vol 88 ◽  
pp. 837-846 ◽  
Author(s):  
Guangying Guan ◽  
Matthias Hirsch ◽  
Zeng Hai Lu ◽  
David T.D. Childs ◽  
Stephen J. Matcher ◽  
...  
2016 ◽  
Author(s):  
Guangying Guan ◽  
Zeng H. Lu ◽  
Matthias Hirsch ◽  
Ruth Goodridge ◽  
David T. D. Childs ◽  
...  

2018 ◽  
Vol 57 (04) ◽  
pp. 1 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael R. Gardner ◽  
Adam Lewis ◽  
Jongwan Park ◽  
Austin B. McElroy ◽  
Arnold D. Estrada ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Guangying Guan ◽  
Matthias Hirsch ◽  
Wahyudin P. Syam ◽  
Richard K. Leach ◽  
Zhihong Huang ◽  
...  

Defects produced during selective laser sintering (SLS) are difficult to non-destructively detect after build completion without the use of X-ray-based methods. Overcoming this issue by assessing integrity on a layer-by-layer basis has become an area of significant interest for users of SLS apparatus. Optical coherence tomography (OCT) is used in this study to detect surface texture and sub-surface powder, which is un-melted/insufficiently sintered, is known to be a common cause of poor part integrity and would prevent the use of SLS where applications dictate assurance of defect-free parts. To demonstrate the capability of the instrument and associated data-processing algorithms, samples were built with graduated porosities which were embedded in fully dense regions in order to simulate defective regions. Simulated in situ measurements were then correlated with the process parameters used to generate variable density regions. Using this method, it is possible to detect loose powder and differentiate between densities of ±5% at a sub-surface depth of approximately 300 μm. In order to demonstrate the value of OCT as a surface-profiling technique, surface texture datasets are compared with focus variation microscopy. Comparable results are achieved after a spatial bandwidth- matching procedure.


2015 ◽  
Vol 105 (01-02) ◽  
pp. 72-77
Author(s):  
M. Fleßner ◽  
B. Galovskyi ◽  
T. Hausotte ◽  
A. Loderer

Generative Fertigungsverfahren erlauben die wirtschaftliche Fertigung auch kleiner Losgrößen. Um diesen Vorteil durch eine gute Qualität zu sichern, wird eine Messtechnik entwickelt, welche die Kontrolle des Werkstücks schon während des Bauprozesses ermöglicht. Für eine optimale Auslegung der Messtechnik wird ein Vorgehen zur Genauigkeitsanalyse am Beispiel eines selektiven Lasersinterprozesses durchgeführt. Darüber hinaus werden die auftretenden systematischen Abweichungen untersucht.   Generative manufacturing processes allow an economical production of small batch sizes. In order to ensure this advantage by good quality, a measurement system is in development which is able to monitor the workpiece during the manufacturing process. For an optimal design of the measurement system, an approach is presented for the evaluation of the accuracy on the example of a selective laser sintering process, followed by an analysis of the detected systematical deviations.


Author(s):  
Feifei Yang ◽  
Tianyu Jiang ◽  
Xu Chen ◽  
Greg Lalier ◽  
John Bartolone

Abstract Selective laser sintering (SLS) technology produces a substantial amount of un-sintered polyamide 12 powders after the manufacturing process. Failure to recycle and reuse these aged powders not only leads to economic losses but also is environmentally unfriendly. This is particularly problematic for powder particles close to the heat-affected zones that go through severe thermal degradations during the laser sintering processes. Limited procedures exist for systematically reusing such extremely aged powders. This work proposes a systematic method to maximize reusability of aged and extremely aged polyamide 12 powders. Building on a previously untapped interlayer heating, pre-processing, and a systematic mixing of powder materials, we show how reclaimed polyamide 12 powders can be consistently reprinted into functional samples, with mechanical properties even superior to current industrial norms. In particular, the proposed method can yield printed samples with 18.04% higher tensile strength and 55.29% larger elongation at break using as much as 30% of extremely aged powders compared to the benchmark sample.


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