Unit - 1
Unit - 1
Unit - 1
INTRODUCTION
Overview
FUNDAMENTALS OF
TYPES OF RP
RP
FDM SLA
SLS 3D PRINTER
FUNDAMENTALS OF RP
The Rapid Prototyping
Wheel depicting the 4
major aspects of RP
1-INPUT
2-METHOD
3-MATERIAL
4-APPLICATIONS
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Functional principle
The system starts by applying a thin layer of the powder material to the
building platform.
A powerful laser beam then fuses the powder at exactly the points
defined by the computer-generated component design data.
Platform is then lowered and another layer of powder is applied.
Once again the material is fused so as to bond with the layer below at
the predefined points. 23
ADVANTAGES
Freedom of design
Complexity for free
Potential elimination of tooling
Lightweight design
Elimination of production steps
DISADVANTAGES
Slow build rates
High production costs
Considerable effort required for application design
Discontinuous production process
Limited component size.
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Applications
AM has been used across a diverse array of
industries, including;
Automotive
Aerospace
Biomedical
Consumer goods and many others
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Additive Manufacturing
AM Materials
However, there are now way too many proprietary materials from the many different 3D printer vendors
to cover them all here.
Instead, we will look at the most popular types of material in a more generic way. And also a couple of
materials that stand out.
AM Materials
Nylon, or Polyamide, is commonly used in powder form with the sintering process or in filament form
with the FDM process. It is a strong, flexible and durable plastic material that has proved reliable for 3D
printing. It is naturally white in colour but it can be coloured — pre- or post printing. This material can
also be combined (in powder format) with powdered aluminium to produce another common 3D
printing material for sintering Alumide.
ABS is another common plastic used for 3D printing, and is widely used on the entry-level FDM 3D
printers in filament form. It is a particularly strong plastic and comes in a wide range of colours.
ABS can be bought in filament form from a number of non- propreitary sources, which is another reason
why it is so popular.
PLA is a bio-degradable plastic material that has gained traction with 3D printing for this very reason. It
can be utilized in resin format for DLP/SL processes as well as in filament form for the FDM process. It
is offered in a variety of colours, including transparent, which has proven to be a useful option for some
some applications of 3D printing. However it is not as durable oras flexible as ABS.
AM Materials
LayWood is a specially developed 3D printing material for entry- level extrusion 3D printers. It comes in
filament form and is a wood/polymer composite (also referred to as WPC).
A growing number of metals and metal composites are used for industrial grade 3D printing. Two of the
most common are aluminium and cobalt derivatives.
One of the strongest and therefore most commonly used metals for 3D printing is Stainless Steel in
powder form for the sintering/ melting/EBM processes. It is naturally silver, but can be plated with other
materials to give a gold or bronze effect.
In the last couple of years Gold and Silver have been added to the range of metal materials that can be
3D printed directly, with obvious applications across the jewellery sector. These are both very strong
materials and are processed in powder form.
Titanium is one of the strongest possible metal materials and has been used for 3D printing industrial
applications for some time.
Supplied in powder form, it can be used for the sintering/melting/ EBM processes.
AM Materials
Ceramics
Ceramics are a relatively new group of materials that can be used for 3D printing with various levels of
success. The particular thing to note with these materials is that, post printing, the ceramic parts need to
undergo the same processes as any ceramic part made using traditional methods of production - namely
firing and glazing.
Paper
Standard A4 copier paper is a 3D printing material employed by the proprietary SDL process supplied
by Mcor Technologies. The company operates a notably different business model to other 3D printing
vendors, whereby the capital outlay for the machine is in the mid-range, but the emphasis is very much
on an easily obtainable, cost-effective material supply, that can be bought locally. 3D printed models
made with paper are safe, environmentally friendly, easily recyclable and require no post-processing.
Bio Materials
There is a huge amount of research being conducted into the potential of 3D printing bio materials for a
host of medical (and other) applications. Living tissue is being investigated at a number of leading
institutions with a view to developing applications that include printing human organs for transplant, as
well as external tissues for replacement body parts. Other research in this area is focused on developing
food stuffs - meat being the prime example.
EN-MME/ Th. Sahner 29
Additive Manufacturing
AM Materials
Bio Materials
There is a huge amount of research being conducted into the potential of 3D printing bio materials for a
host of medical (and other) applications. Living tissue is being investigated at a number of leading
institutions with a view to developing applications that include printing human organs for transplant, as
well as external tissues for replacement body parts.
Food
Experiments with extruders for 3D printing food substances has increased dramatically over the last
couple of years. Chocolate is the most common (and desirable). There are also printers that work with
sugar and some experiments with pasta and meat. Looking to the future, research is being undertaken, to
utilize 3D printing technology to produce finely balanced whole meals.
Other
And finally, one company that does have a unique (proprietary) material offering is Stratasys, with its
digital materials for the Objet Connex 3D printing platform. This offering means that standard Objet 3D
printing materials can be combined during the printing process — in various and specified
concentrations to form new materials with the required properties. Up to 140 different Digital Materials
can be realized from combining the existing primary materials in different ways.
Concrete
EN-MME/ Th. Sahner 30
Materials of Additive Manufacturing
• Nylon
• ABS
• PLA
• Laywood
• Ceramic
• Biomaterials
• concrete
Economics of Additive Manufacturing
• Less waste
• No tooling cost
• Smaller production runs
• Large scale customization
• Eliminates lead time
What is Rapid Tooling
• Rapid tooling is a term used to describe a process
which either uses a rapid prototyping model as a
pattern to create a mould quickly or uses the rapid
prototyping process directly to fabricate a tool for a
limited volume of prototypes.
(a) (b)
(a) (b)
Indirect RT Direct RT
Techniques for Indirect RT
1) RSP Tooling
2) Reconfigurable Tooling
3) Silicone Rubber Tooling
4) Aluminum filled Epoxy Tooling
5) Spray Metal Tooling
6) Cast kirksite
7) 3D Keltool
8) RIM
Direct Rapid Tooling
The CAD file is used directly to produce the part
without need for further operations
Can be used for;
• Selective Laser Sintering
• Produces porous metal moulds by CAD/CAM
• Plaster moulds made by CNC machining
• 3D printing
• Uses a wide variety of material – steel, copper
polyamide etc.
Advantages
• -Reduced manufacturing time
• -much less expensive
• -Effective communication
• -decreases development time
• -removal of redundant features
• -early viewing of the product
• -early market testing
• -early testing (assembly, functional)
Disadvantages
• shorter tool life
• -less accurate tolerances
• -not suitable for large sized applications
• -fail in product replication
• -cost is debatable
• -lacks an obvious stopping point
• -Usually does not produce reusable batch
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