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Additive Manufacturing
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Proceedings Papers
ITSC2024, Thermal Spray 2024: Proceedings from the International Thermal Spray Conference, 469-482, April 29–May 1, 2024,
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Cold spray additive manufacturing (CSAM) is an emerging process that has garnered significant attention from researchers due to its unique advantages. These include higher deposition rates, no need for a protective atmosphere, and the ability to connect or combine dissimilar materials. While CSAM allows for near-net-shape fabrication of workpieces, the accuracy and properties of the final products often fall short of user requirements. Furthermore, there is an urgent need to develop a generalized manufacturing strategy for workpieces with complex geometries. It appears that integrating various processes throughout the entire manufacturing workflow, from design to delivery, could address these challenges. However, few researchers have explored this area. To fill this gap, this study presents an integrated modular CSAM system designed for efficient and flexible workpiece fabrication. The system comprises two main components: software for modeling and simulation, and hardware for precise fabrication, each containing multiple modules. These modules do not operate independently but are coupled through direct or indirect decentralized and event-driven physical links. The system described in this paper offers a generalized strategy for precision manufacturing of workpieces using CSAM, potentially advancing the field and addressing current limitations in accuracy and versatility.
Proceedings Papers
ITSC2024, Thermal Spray 2024: Proceedings from the International Thermal Spray Conference, 483-494, April 29–May 1, 2024,
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Recently, laser deposition technologies have made significant advancements in their ability to manufacture high temperature metals and ceramics. One of these technologies, known as Direct Energy Deposition (DED), has the potential to deposit a wide range of materials from polymers to refractory materials, ceramics and functionally graded materials. This study evaluates major microstructural characteristics of WC-Co additively manufactured by DED technology. This material is commonly used for deposition of protective coatings due to its high hardness and excellent wear resistance. To this end, hardness and wear resistance of the DED processed samples were also investigated in this study. WC-Co coatings are generally deposited using various thermal spray technologies. However, it is speculated that DED deposited WC-Co could provide superior properties such as higher hardness and wear resistance. A DED manufactured WC-Co sample was examined by Optical Microscopy (OM), Scanning Electron Microscopy (SEM), Energy Dispersive Spectroscopy (EDS), and X-ray Diffraction (XRD). Those studies could provide information about important microstructural features, chemical compositions and phase distribution. All the tests were also repeated on High-Velocity Oxygen Fuel (HVOF) deposited WC-Co with the same composition. Both DED and HVOF produced WC-Co coatings experience decomposition of the carbides into compound phases; however, the DED deposited sample displays unique dendritic and eutectic structures that improve the hardness and wear properties compared to the homogenous HVOF coating. In addition, DED produced samples show higher hardness and relatively better wear resistance compared to the HVOF deposited ones. The obtained results could establish a relationship between microstructural characteristics with hardness and wear properties of both samples.
Proceedings Papers
ITSC2024, Thermal Spray 2024: Proceedings from the International Thermal Spray Conference, 495-507, April 29–May 1, 2024,
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Thermal spray (TS) technology has attracted the attention of numerous industrial sectors due to its apparent simplicity and versatility. It has been used across the world for over 80 years in the conservation and creation of art. Despite the creativity involved in the creation of an art piece, the TS artistic endeavors are limited and insufficiently explored. Unique material combinations, usually not observed in conventional engineering applications, can be achieved with TS technology. Although the material amalgamation possibilities are infinite, their combined deposited characteristics, interfacial compatibility and color palette require further study. In this work, the fields of photography, image processing and TS are combined to produce a large art-piece using the cold gas dynamic spray (CGDS) process. Aluminum, zinc, nickel, alumina, steel and titanium alloy powders are sprayed to replicate in three-dimensions a photograph of a crinoid from the Silurian period found on the Anticosti Island, located in the Gulf of St. Lawrence in Canada. The numerous steps required to produce the artistic 3D piece, namely numerical segmentation of the photograph, conversion to a computer-assisted design (CAD), manufacturing of steel masks and CGDS deposition of the selected powders to reach the sought color palette are described. Powder deposition efficiency, material compatibility and microstructural characteristics are analyzed. and the resulting art piece is presented.
Proceedings Papers
ITSC2024, Thermal Spray 2024: Proceedings from the International Thermal Spray Conference, 508-513, April 29–May 1, 2024,
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Spattering is an unavoidable phenomenon in the selective laser melting (SLM) process, which can cause various printing defects and harmful powder recycling. Since the size of powder spattering is too small at the micron level, it is difficult to investigate the entire dynamic spattering process experimentally. The comprehensive understanding of the intricate dynamics of powder spattering during the SLM process remains incomplete. Therefore, we develop a new multiphase flow model to study the transient dynamic behaviors of the gas phase and powder spattering, which agrees well with the experimental observation result. It is the first time that the whole transient dynamic process of powder motion from starting to move induced by the vapor jet to falling to the substrate wall and stopping completely was observed. Powder spattering motion dynamics induced by metal vapor jet and argon gas flow, as a function of time, laser parameters, and location, are presented. The moving speed, total amount, and dropping distribution on the substrate of powder spattering that varies with laser parameters are quantified.
Proceedings Papers
ITSC2024, Thermal Spray 2024: Proceedings from the International Thermal Spray Conference, 514-519, April 29–May 1, 2024,
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Thick deposits were produced from pure Al powder of three different sieve sizes using cold spraying at the same process parameters. The in-plane mechanical and fracture properties of the deposits were investigated using bending of small specimens in four specimen orientations. It was shown that increasing the Al particle size by approximately 50% and 100% leads to small, but statistically significant differences of yield strength. Further, the increase in the powder particle size led to higher fracture toughness K IC but lower fatigue crack growth threshold ΔK thr . This can be attributed to two different fracture mechanisms in the cold sprayed deposits. A trans-particular fracture in the near-threshold fatigue regime is controlled by the microstructure and work hardening of the particles. At higher cyclic loads and in quasi-static regime, the particle decohesion and the resulting crack path determine the fracture behavior instead. However, the observed effect of particle size was rather small, much smaller than the effect of spray process parameters observed in the previous research.
Proceedings Papers
ITSC 2022, Thermal Spray 2022: Proceedings from the International Thermal Spray Conference, 607-613, May 4–6, 2022,
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Metals were deposited on components made by 3-D printing with polyvinyl alcohol (PVA), a water-soluble polymer. The polymer was then dissolved, leaving a metal layer whose surface topography was the negative of that of the polymer. This is a rapid and low-cost alternative to 3D printing directly using metal, but to succeed it is essential for the sprayed metal to adhere to the polymer substrate. Tests were done in which aluminum and copper were sprayed using a twin-wire arc spray system onto 3D printed coupons, 50 mm x 50 mm in size, made from polylactic acid (PLA), PLA mixed with metal (aluminum, copper) or carbon fiber, and PVA. Adhesion depended on substrate roughness (minimum 1-2 μm) and substrate temperature (above the glass transition temperature but below the melting temperature of the polymer). It was shown that surface features could be made with high resolution on metal components using this technique.
Proceedings Papers
ITSC 2022, Thermal Spray 2022: Proceedings from the International Thermal Spray Conference, 614-621, May 4–6, 2022,
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Cold Spraying (CS) is a thermal spray process capable of producing dense and thick coatings by the spraying of powders under high velocity and relatively low temperature. The high deposition efficiency and the thickness of each pass make possible the use of CS to produce freestanding parts, as an additive manufacturing process (CSAM). Traditionally, CS is performed spraying perpendicularly to the substrate, which ensures maximum deposition efficiency among other benefits. This, however, presents two main disadvantages for CSAM. First, by keeping the spraying angle constant, there is not much control on the final geometry of the part being built, and, second, the resultant part’s properties show anisotropy depending on whether this property is measured along the spraying axe or not. In this work, we present a method (Metal Knitting) that aims to help reduce both disadvantages. Metal Knitting is based on the performance of certain spraying movements that build near squared shapes step-by-step like in a knitting process. The principle of the method and examples are presented in this work, as well as some results on the anisotropy of 316L stainless steel freeform parts obtained by CSAM, measuring the tensile stress, hardness, and evaluating the microstructure in different directions of the material. The effect of annealing on the material properties is also investigated.
Proceedings Papers
ITSC 2022, Thermal Spray 2022: Proceedings from the International Thermal Spray Conference, 951-960, May 4–6, 2022,
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Cermets are composite materials consisting of a ceramic reinforcement and a metal matrix. Conventional tungsten carbide cermet parts containing a cobalt matrix phase are mainly produced by powder sintering. Laser Powder Bed Fusion (L-PBF) is an additive manufacturing technology widely applied for direct fabrication of metal functional parts with complex geometry. The present paper deals with the feasibility study of additive manufacturing of cermet parts by L-PBF using WC-17Co powder. The results showed that parametric optimisation of the L-PBF process allowed the production of solid WC-17Co part. Structural analysis revealed the presence of significant porosity (1.41%) and small-scale cracks in the as-built samples. Post-processing, such as HIP (Hot Isostatic Pressure) significantly improved the structure of manufactured parts. The porosity after HIP was very low (0.01%) and phase analysis revealed that the samples after HIP did not contain the fragile W 2 C phase. Abrasive wear tests showed that the wear resistance performance of additively manufactured parts was comparable to a reference produced by powder sintering. High values of hardness (around 1100 HV 30 ) were observed for the as-built and HIP samples. The study successfully demonstrated the possibility of manufacturing wear-resistant cermet parts by L-PBF.