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Rapid Manufacturing with Direct Metal Laser Sintering

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 February 2011

J-E. Lind
Affiliation:
Rapid Manufacturing Development Group, EOS Finland, Aholantie 17, 21290 Rusko, Finland
J. Hanninen
Affiliation:
Rapid Manufacturing Development Group, EOS Finland, Aholantie 17, 21290 Rusko, Finland
J. Kotila
Affiliation:
Rapid Manufacturing Development Group, EOS Finland, Aholantie 17, 21290 Rusko, Finland
O. Nyrhila
Affiliation:
Rapid Manufacturing Development Group, EOS Finland, Aholantie 17, 21290 Rusko, Finland
T. Syvanen
Affiliation:
Rapid Manufacturing Development Group, EOS Finland, Aholantie 17, 21290 Rusko, Finland
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Abstract

The term Rapid Manufacturing is today very often used as a substitute for Rapid Prototyping, because the manufacturing processes and materials have developed so much that the parts produced with the machines can even be used as functional production parts. For Direct Metal Laser Sintering (DMLS) this was enabled by the introduction of the powders for 20 micron layer thickness; steel-based powder in 2001 and bronze-based powder in 2002. Successful rapid manufacturing with DMLS does not only mean the reduction of layer thickness, but it is a sum of many factors that had to be optimized in order to make the process work with the 20 micron layer thickness: the metal powder behavior in very thin layers is not the same as with thicker layers, the demands for the support structures are higher and the possibility of using multiples of the layer thickness gives additional freedom. By optimizing the process parameters the UTS values for the steel-based powder increased up to 600 MPa and for the bronze-based powder up to 400 MPa. At the same time the surface roughness (Ra) values after shot peening were 3 microns and 2 microns, respectively. Although using thinner layers also increases the building time the advantage is gained in drastically reduced finishing times due to increased surface quality and detail resolution. Typical geometries produced by DMLS are difficult-to-manufacture components and components typically produced by P/M or even by die-casting. The paper covers the development aspects in both material and process development and also presents some realized case studies.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Materials Research Society 2003

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References

REFERENCES

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