Klamert, V., Schiefermair, L., Bublin, M., & Otto, A. (2023). In Situ Analysis of Curling Defects in Powder Bed Fusion of Polyamide by Simultaneous Application of Laser Profilometry and Thermal Imaging. Applied Sciences, 13(12), Article 7179. https://doi.org/10.3390/app13127179
E311-02 - Forschungsbereich Photonische Technologien E311-02-1 - Forschungsgruppe Prozesssimulation E311 - Institut für Fertigungstechnik und Photonische Technologien
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Journal:
Applied Sciences
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ISSN:
2076-3417
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Date (published):
15-Jun-2023
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Number of Pages:
21
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Publisher:
MDPI
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Peer reviewed:
Yes
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Keywords:
additive manufacturing; powder bed fusion of polymers; laser profilometry; thermal imaging; process control
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Abstract:
Additive manufacturing (AM) is one of the key technologies in the global manufacturing market within various application sectors. The unique capabilities of AM enable high structural and part complexity, low material waste, and benefits in productivity by reducing design cycles and time to market. Efficient real-time quality control is still an important challenge in AM. In this paper, a real-time and in situ approach for monitoring the process in powder bed fusion of polyamide (PBF-LB/P/PA12) is proposed using the simultaneous application of two individual sensors, enabling the overlay and direct comparison of independent output data. An industrial grade laser profilometer and a thermal infrared (IR) camera were successfully integrated into a commercial system for PBFLB/P. Artificially created curling defects were induced in a reproducible way by the manipulation of process parameters. The radiometric data was evaluated and processed into 3D topology and profile measurements to highlight peaks and curling progression. The results measured using different powder bed conditions were contrasted with corresponding thermographic data to prove the thermal visibility of curling and the influence of inhomogeneous temperature distribution on geometrical powder surface defects. The experimental setup enables the measuring of the entire powder bed surface inside the machine, with no limitations to sub-areas. Results indicate the measurable presence of curling and related temperature influences. When curling reached maximum values, inverted warpage into the negative z-direction was detected at part center as a further effect. These results can be used for improving real-time quality control in AM.
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Project (external):
City of Vienna City of Vienna
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Project ID:
MA23—Projekt 29-22 MA23—Projekt 30-25
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Research Areas:
Digital Transformation in Manufacturing: 30% Non-metallic Materials: 40% Sensor Systems: 30%