3D Printing
3D Printing
3D Printing
MANUFACTURING (AM) ?
What is additive manufacturing?
Additive manufacturing is the process of creating an object
by building it one layer at a time. It is the opposite of
subtractive manufacturing, in which an object is created by
cutting away at a solid block of material until the final
product is complete. It transforms a CAD model into a real
object by layer to layer deposition of materials.
The term "3D printing“ or ‘’Rapid Prototyping” is increasingly
used as for Additive manufacturing.
INTRODUCTION TO ADDITIVE
MANUFACTURING (AM) ?
The process is ‘additive’ in nature, with layers being successively added to
build a part, as opposed to ‘subtractive’ technologies, where material is
removed or shaped by machining, milling or forming. Importantly.
In Additive Manufacturing the part geometry is always digitally defined and
based on digital 3D model data from a computer-aided design (CAD)
program.
Additive Manufacturing offers many advantages over more traditional
manufacturing technologies. The ability to selectively deposit materials only
where they are needed means that parts can be much more complex in
design, and lighter weight, which can dramatically improve performance.
The process is tool less, unlike processes such as casting and injection
molding that require significant up-front investment in tooling, and offers
increased design freedom as well as one-off or personalized products. The
tool less nature of the process meant that prototypes could be fabricated
easily and checked for form, fit and function, enabling rapid innovation in
product development.
.
INTRODUCTION TO ADDITIVE
MANUFACTURING (AM) ?
After all, the actual build is only one part of a much larger
process. In this article, we'll look at the entire additive
manufacturing process from start to finish.
Step 4: Post-processing.
Subtractive manufacturing Additive manufacturing
•3D objects are constructed by •Here 3D objects are created by
successively cutting material away successively depositing material in
from a solid block of material layers
CONVENTIONAL MANUFACTURING
CONCEPTUAL DESIGN
CAD MODELLING
DETAIL DESIGN
ENGINEERING
FEA
ANALYSIS TIME SAVE
PROTOTYPING
TOOLING
RP
PRODUCTION
MARKETING
TIME
Courtesy:- Mr. D. Chandramohan, Dr. K. Marimuthu, Rapid prototyping/rapid tooling – a over view
And its applications in orthopaedics, International Journal of Advanced Engineering Technology
FDM AND SLS TECHNIQUE
Principle
Operation
Construction
Materials
Process parameters
When the FDM printer begins printing, the raw material is extruded as a
thin filament through the heated nozzle. It is deposited at the bottom of
the printer platform, where it solidifies. The next layer that is extruded
fuses with the layer below, building the object from the bottom up layer
by layer.
Most FDM printers first print the outer edges, the interior edges next
and lastly the interior of the layer as either a solid layer or as a fill in
matrix.
In some objects / models, there are fragile ‘overhangs’ that will droop
unless they are given some support. FDM printers incorporate a
mechanism whereby these support structures (called struts) are printed
along with the object. They are later removed once the build is
complete.
FUSED DEPOSITION MODELLING (FDM)
Icing on a cake
Courtesy:- Mr. D. Chandramohan, Dr. K. Marimuthu, Rapid prototyping/rapid tooling – a over view
And its applications in orthopaedics, International Journal of Advanced Engineering Technology
PEEK is becoming very famous nowadays for medical
applications
Infill
Support
No wastage of materials
Lack of expensive lenses, lasers as seen in Photo-polymerisation or
Sintering Techniques
Limitations
FDM machines are costly
Because of circular nozzles sharp edges cannot be made easily
Low speed and accuracy
Parts are An-Isotropy in nature (Z direction )
Dimensional accuracy is bad
Surface finish is bad
Rocket Engine Injector Manufactured with 3-D
Printing Machine by NASA
•Thin layers of powders (0.075-0.1 mm thick) are spread across the build area using a
counter-rotating powder levelling roller.
•The part building process takes place inside an enclosed chamber filled with nitrogen gas
(prevents oxidation).
A focussed CO2 laser beam is directed onto the powder bed and is moved using
galvanometers.
Supporting powder remains loose and serves as support for subsequent layers.
After completion a layer, the build platform is lowered by one layer thickness and
a new layer of powder is laid and levelled using the counter rotating roller.
Metals and Composites :- Steel, Ti and alloys, Ni based alloys, aluminium alloys etc.
Fusion Mechanisms :
Chemically induced binding : use of thermally active chemicals. Used for binding ceramics
Selective Laser Sintering, Selective Laser Melting, Direct Metal Laser Sintering,
Electron Beam Melting etc.. Are the other names for the same technology.
PROCESS PARAMETERS
In PBF, process parameters can be lumped into four categories:
(2) Scan related parameters (scan speed, scan spacing, and scan
pattern)