Additive Manufacturing of Titanium Parts Using 3D Plasma Metal Deposition

2018 ◽  
Vol 941 ◽  
pp. 2137-2141 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kevin Hoefer ◽  
Peter Mayr

Additive manufacturing of titanium components offers several advantages compared to conventional production technologies such as higher material utilization efficiency and increased geometric possibilities. In comparison to laser powder bed processes, arc-based additive manufacturing processes have the additional advantage of an almost unlimited assembly space, higher deposition rates and an improved utilisation factor of raw materials. Disadvantages of wire-based methods are the restricted availability of different types of wire consumables, the fact that the wire feed rate is directly coupled to the heat input and the lack of possibility to create multi-material structures in-situ.Within this work, the 3D Plasma Metal Deposition (3DPMD) method, based on a plasma powder deposition process is introduced. 3DPMD has some special advantages compared to the established plasma powder process and other additive processes. For example, up to four powders, which can differ in terms of material and powder fraction, can be mixed within one layer. This allows a targeted adaption of local properties (microstructure, mechanical properties, wear resistance, porosity, etc.) to the targeted load type and level. The tailored introduction of reinforcement particles, e.g. tungsten or titanium carbides, into the component is a simple example.The study aims to demonstrate the suitability of the 3DPMD for the production of titanium components in layer-by-layer design. Various demonstrators are prepared and analysed. The microstructures, the porosity and the hardness values of the different structures are analysed.In summary, 3DPMD offers the possibility to produce titanium structures with and without reinforcement particles. Using automated routines, it is possible to generate metallic structures directly from the CAD drawings using welding robots. Microstructures and properties are directly related to the process and, therefore, structure-process-property relationships are discussed within this work.

Author(s):  
Jyoti Mazumder ◽  
Lijun Song

Recently Additive Manufacturing (AM) has been hailed as the “third industrial revolution” by The Economist magazine [April-2012]. Precision of the product manufactured by AM largely depends on the on line process diagnostics and control. AM caters to the quest for a material to suit the service performance, which is almost as old as the human civilization. An enabling technology which can build, repair or reconfigure components layer by layer or even pixel by pixel with appropriate materials to match the performance will enhance the productivity and thus reduce energy consumption. With the globalization, “Economic Space” for an organization is now spreads all across the globe. The promise of AM for Global Platform for precision additive manufacturing largely depends on the speed and accuracy of in-situ optical diagnostics and its capability to integrate with the process control. The two main groups of AM are powder bed (e.g. Laser Sintering) and pneumatically delivered powder (e.g. Direct Metal Deposition [DMD]) to fabricate components. DMD has closed loop capability, which enables better dimension and thermal cycle control. This enables one to deposit different material at different pixels with a given height directly from a CAD drawing. The feed back loop also controls the thermal cycle. New optical Sensors are either developed or being developed to control geometry using imaging, cooling rate by monitoring temperature, microstructure, temperature and composition using optical spectra. Ultimately these sensors will enable one to “Certify as you Build”. Flexibility of the process is enormous and essentially it is an enabling technology to materialize many a design. Several cases will be discussed to demonstrate the additional capabilities possible with the new sensors. Conceptually one can seat in Singapore and fabricate in Shanghai. Such systems will be a natural choice for a Global “Economic Space”.


2011 ◽  
Vol 314-316 ◽  
pp. 1029-1033
Author(s):  
Yu Yu Zhou ◽  
Yun Qing Rao ◽  
Guo Jun Zhang ◽  
Chao Yong Zhang

Packing problem, which occurs frequently in sheet metal, clothing and furniture industry, cut product patterns from raw materials most efficiently and maximize material utilization. In this paper, an adaptive memetic algorithm is proposed to solve the problem of irregular shapes packed on the rectangular sheets. First, operators and parameters of evolution is researched, and second, local search method is proposed. Finally, this study compares benchmarks presented by other authors. The results show that the material utilization efficiency by using the adaptive memetic algorithm is higher compared to other methods.


Author(s):  
Murali M. Sundaram ◽  
Abishek B. Kamaraj ◽  
Varun S. Kumar

Additive manufacturing (AM) of metallic structures by laser based layered manufacturing processes involve thermal damages. In this work, the feasibility of mask-less electrochemical deposition as a nonthermal metallic AM process has been studied. Layer by layer localized electrochemical deposition using a microtool tip has been performed to manufacture nickel microstructures. Three-dimensional free hanging structures with about 600 μm height and 600 μm overhang are manufactured to establish the process capability. An inhouse built CNC system was integrated in this study with an electrochemical cell to achieve 30 layers thick microparts in about 5 h by AM directly from STL files generated from corresponding CAD models. The layer thickness achieved in this process was about 10 μm and the minimum feature size depends on the tool width. Simulation studies of electrochemical deposition performed to understand the pulse wave characteristics and their effects on the localization of the deposits.


2021 ◽  
Vol 1201 (1) ◽  
pp. 012037
Author(s):  
F Bjørheim ◽  
I M La Torraca Lopez

Abstract In contrast to the traditional ways of subtractive manufacturing, additive manufacturing (AM), also known as 3D printing, adapts computer-aided design to iteratively build the component or part layer by layer. The technology has recently gained a high momentum, both within academia, but also within the industrial sector. However, it is common that parts produced by AM will have more defects than parts produced by traditional methods. The objective of this paper is to investigate a new method of additive manufacturing, namely the bound metal deposition method (BMD). This method seemed promising from the perspective that the metal is not iteratively being melted, similar to such as welding. In fact, the part is first printed, then washed, for then to be sintered. Consequently, avoiding the complex thermal histories/cycles. It was found that the material will exhibit anisotropic behaviour, and have a mesh of crack like defects, related to the printing orientation.


Scanning ◽  
2022 ◽  
Vol 2022 ◽  
pp. 1-14
Author(s):  
R. Raj Mohan ◽  
R. Venkatraman ◽  
S. Raghuraman ◽  
P. Manoj Kumar ◽  
Moti Lal Rinawa ◽  
...  

Powder-based additive manufacturing (PAM) is a potential fabrication approach in advancing state-of-the-art research to produce intricate components with high precision and accuracy in near-net form. In PAM, the raw materials are used in powder form, deposited on the surface layer by layer, and fused to produce the final product. PAM composite fabrication for biomedical implants, aircraft structure panels, and automotive brake rotary components is gaining popularity. In PAM composite fabrication, the aluminium cast alloy is widely preferred as a metal matrix for its unique properties, and different reinforcements are employed in the form of oxides, carbides, and nitrides. However, for enhancing the mechanical properties, the carbide form is predominantly considered. This comprehensive study focuses on contemporary research and reveals the effect of metal carbide’s (MCs) addition to the aluminium matrix processed through various PAM processes, challenges involved, and potential scopes to advance the research.


Author(s):  
Kamardeen Olajide Abdulrahman ◽  
Esther T. Akinlabi ◽  
Rasheedat M. Mahamood

Three-dimensional printing has evolved into an advanced laser additive manufacturing (AM) process with capacity of directly producing parts through CAD model. AM technology parts are fabricated through layer by layer build-up additive process. AM technology cuts down material wastage, reduces buy-to-fly ratio, fabricates complex parts, and repairs damaged old functional components. Titanium aluminide alloys fall under the group of intermetallic compounds known for high temperature applications and display of superior physical and mechanical properties, which made them most sort after in the aeronautic, energy, and automobile industries. Laser metal deposition is an AM process used in the repair and fabrication of solid components but sometimes associated with thermal induced stresses which sometimes led to cracks in deposited parts. This chapter looks at some AM processes with more emphasis on laser metal deposition technique, effect of LMD processing parameters, and preheating of substrate on the physical, microstructural, and mechanical properties of components produced through AM process.


2017 ◽  
Vol 22 (4) ◽  
pp. 466-479 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stella Holzbach Oliari ◽  
Ana Sofia Clímaco Monteiro D’Oliveira ◽  
Martin Schulz

Abstract Laser additive manufacturing (LAM) is a near-net-shape production technique by which a part can be built up from 3D CAD model data, without material removal. Recently, these production processes gained attention due to the spreading of polymer-based processes in private and commercial applications. However, due to the insufficient development of metal producing processes regarding design, process information and qualification, resistance on producing functional components with this technology is still present. To overcome this restriction further studies have to be undertaken. The present research proposes a parametric study of additive manufacturing of hot work tool steel, H11. The selected LAM process is wire-based laser metal deposition (LMD-W). The study consists of parameters optimization for single beads (laser power, travel speed and wire feed rate) as well as lateral and vertical overlap for layer-by-layer technique involved in LMD process. Results show that selection of an ideal set of parameters affects substantially the surface quality, bead uniformity and bond between substrate and clad. Discussion includes the role of overlapping on the soundness of parts based on the height homogeneity of each layer, porosity and the presence of gaps. For the conditions tested it was shown that once the deposition parameters are selected, lateral and vertical overlapping determines the integrity and quality of parts processed by LAM.


Polymers ◽  
2022 ◽  
Vol 14 (2) ◽  
pp. 293
Author(s):  
Shijie Jiang ◽  
Ke Hu ◽  
Yang Zhan ◽  
Chunyu Zhao ◽  
Xiaopeng Li

Material extrusion (ME), one of the most widely used additive manufacturing technique, has the advantages of freedom of design, wide range of raw materials, strong ability to manufacture complex products, etc. However, ME products have obvious surface defects due to the layer-by-layer manufacturing characteristics. To reveal the generation mechanism, the three-dimensional surface roughness (3DSR) of ME products was investigated theoretically and experimentally. Based on the forming process of bonding neck, the 3DSR theoretical model in two different directions (vertical and parallel to the fiber direction) was established respectively. The preparation of ME samples was then completed and a series of experimental tests were performed to determine their surface roughness with the laser microscope. Through the comparison between theoretical and experimental results, the proposed model was validated. In addition, sensitivity analysis is implemented onto the proposed model, investigating how layer thickness, extrusion temperature, and extrusion width influence the samples’ surface roughness. This study provides theoretical basis and technical insight into improving the surface quality of ME products.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jayaprakash Sharma Panchagnula ◽  
Suryakumar Simhambhatla

Abstract Amongst various additive manufacturing (AM) techniques for realizing the complex metallic objects, weld deposition (arc) based directed energy AM technique is attaining the more focus over commercially available powder bed fusion techniques. This is due to the capability of high deposition rates, high power and material utilization, simpler setup and less initial investment of arc based AM. Nevertheless, realization of sudden overhanging features through arc based weld deposition techniques is still a challenging task due to the necessity of support structures. The present work describes a novel methodology for producing complex metallic objects with sudden overhangs without using supports. This is possible by re-orienting the workpiece and/or deposition head at every instance using higher order kinematics (5-axis setup) to make sure the overhanging feature is in-line to the deposition direction. The proposed technique identifies the sudden overhangs form a CAD model (.stl) and generates an orthogonal tool path for deposition of the same. To validate this technique, objects with sudden overhangs (illustrative case studies) have been taken up for deposition. An In-house MATLAB routine has developed and presented for performing the same. Although this technique is suitable for any deposition process, it has been demonstrated using gas metal arc welding (GMAW) based weld-deposition, where the raw material to be deposited is in the form of a welding wire.


3D Printing ◽  
2017 ◽  
pp. 172-182 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rasheedat M. Mahamood

Laser metal deposition process belongs to the directed energy deposition class of additive manufacturing process that is capable of producing highly complex part directly from the three dimensional (3D) computer aided design file of the component by adding materials layer after layers. Laser metal deposition process is a very important additive manufacturing process and it is the only class of additive manufacturing process that can be used to repair valued component parts which were not repairable in the past. Also because this additive manufacturing process can handle multiple materials simultaneously, it is used to produce part with functionally graded material. Some of the features of the laser metal deposition process are described in this chapter. Some experimental studies on the laser metal deposition of Titanium alloy- composite are also presented.


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