Additive Manufacturing – Basics/Introduction
K. G. Prashanth
Department of Mechanical and Industrial Engineering, Tallinn University of Technology, Tallinn, Estonia
Outline
- Introduction Additive Manufacturing
- Additive Manufacturing Processes
- AM Applications
- When to use AM
2 11/8/21
Manufacturing Processes
Definite component Manufacturing process combines raw matarial to an useful
component
subtractive manufacturing (SM) additive manufacturing (AM) /
solid free form processing (SFF)
process of removing undesired layer of material in
a controlled way to produce a desired object – process of joining materials by fusing / binding /
may result in high cost and environmental issues solidifying resin / powder usually layer by layer,
from 3D CAD data
Machining processes – cutting, turning, milling,
boring, drilling, boring, reaming, tapping etc. Stereolithography, 3D printing, selective laser
melting (SLM), selective laser sintering (SLS),
selective mask sintering, electron beam melting,
digital light processing, ultrasonic consolidation etc.
3 11/8/21
Geographical and geometrical flexibility
Flexibility in manufacturing (both geographical and geometrical)
Anyone can build any part at any location at any time (electricity, raw materials & Computer)
4 11/8/21
AM in nature
Shaping of objects by successive addition of material...
5 11/8/21
Traditional AM Processes
Ancient / traditional
6 11/8/21
AM definition
Additive Manufacturing (AM) – Process by which digital 3D design data is used to build up a component in layers by
depositing material
3D printing is used for AM
However, AM is more accurate in – describes a professional production technique which is clearly distinguished from
conventional methods of material removal
ASTM Committee
Additive Manufacturing Technologies/F42
Aerospace and Aircraft/F07
Aircraft Systems/F38
Fatigue and Fracture/E08
General Aviation Aircraft/F44
Medical and Surgical Materials and Devices/F04
Metal Powders and Metal Powder Products/B09
Plastics/D20
Unmanned Aircraft Systems/F38
7 11/8/21
AM Classification
8 11/8/21
Classification
Additive Manufacturing
Single step AM Process Multi step AM process
Fusion of similar materials Adhesion of metals +
Secondary processing
Metallic Polymer Ceramic Composite
Metallic Ceramic Composite
9 11/8/21
Single step AM processes
Single step AM processes
10 11/8/21
Powder bed fusion processes
Powder bed + Selective meting (by thermal energy)
Thermal Sources
Electron Beam (EBM – Electron Beam Melting process)
Laser Beam (SLM – Selective Laser Melting process)
Several commercially available equipments for SLM (SLM Solutions, EOS, Concept Laser, Realizer, Renishaw, 3D systems,
etc.) – relatively slow process, dimensional accuracy and flexible design.
EBM – ARCAM (Fast process, hot chamber, difficult to remove powder from hallow sections...)
11 11/8/21
Multistep AM processes
Multi step AM processes
12 11/8/21
Cost factor
13 11/8/21
AM – practical issues
3D printing is not standardized
Customized parts inexpensively
Cost to Quality!
3D printing vs traditional manufacturing – installation cost
Lack of universal standards
Consistency in quality and process parameters
14 11/8/21
AM – practical issues
High equipment and product costs
0.5 million – small metal 3D printer
High costs – large production volume
Slow process
Days for bigger components
Quality a concern
15 11/8/21
AM – practical issues
3D printing knowledge gap
Innovations every other day!
Designer + Scientists + Technicians
Future employees…!
16 11/8/21
AM – practical issues
Intellectual property complications
Value chain – shifting the value of object itself to design
Design – if not protected – security concerns and liability issues
e.g. weapons
17 11/8/21
AM – practical issues
https://www.jabil.com/insights/blog-main/overcoming-top-3d-printing-challenges.html
18 11/8/21
AM – practical issues – Material challenges
SLM material
Al-based Fe-based Ti-based Other alloys
(1) Nitinol – shape
memory alloy
(2) CoCr Mo
Pure Fe SS Maraging Metallic glass (3) Ni-based (IN 718,
316L Steel 625 & Metallic
glass)
(4) Zr-based glass
Pure Ti Ti6Al4V Ti-Nb
Ti-Al
Composites
Al-Si system Al-RE-TM 2XXX 7XXX Composites
Quasicrystals
Al-12Si AlYNiCo
Al-10Si-Mg AlGdNiCo
19 11/8/21
AM – practical issues – material challenges
20 11/8/21
Disadvantages of AM
- High energy consumption - Surface finish
- Part cost (Expensive) – experimental use and material cost
- Material limitations - Dimensional control
- User friendliness?
- Harmful emissions
- Process speed - Size limitations
- Copyright infringements
- Job loss (manufacturing)
21 11/8/21
AM – pros and cons
- Freedom of design at low cost (no restriction - Unexpected pre- and post-processing
with shape)
- Increased processing cost
- Rapid iteration through design permutation
- Lack of industrial standards
- Excellent mass customization
- Low speed (Mass production)
- Elimination of tooling
- Inconsistent material
- Green manufacturing
- Limited materials
- Minimal material waste
- High equipment cost for high end
- Personalized manufacturing manufacturing
- No assembly needed - Property concerns
22 11/8/21
AM – gaps and needs
Material Modeling
Design Characterization
development monitoring
methodology and
and control and
and standards certification
evaluation processes
23 11/8/21
AM – Material and Process Consideration
- Absorptance ( rate of absorbed to incident radiation – proportional – optical penetration depth
- Optical penetration depth – depth at which the intensity of the radiation inside the material falls to
appx. 37% of the original value
- Surface tension
- Wettability
- Viscosity
Process planning
Orientation of parts
Support Design
Slicing and scan path
24 11/8/21
Applications
25 11/8/21
When to use AM
Improved functionality (light weight structures, conformal cooling channels, material
reduction...)
26 11/8/21
When to use AM
High manufacturing cost due to processing (complex structures)
27 11/8/21
When to use AM
Saving assembly costs
28 11/8/21
When to use AM
Reduced lead time
29 11/8/21
When to use AM
Inventory cost
30 11/8/21
When to use AM
Materials saving
ρrel = 24 % ρrel = 12 % ρrel = 4 %
31 11/8/21