Mechanical & Materials Engineering, Department of

 

Date of this Version

2021

Citation

Published in final edited form as: Addit Manuf. 2021 ; 39: . doi:10.1016/j.addma.2021.101861

PMCID: PMC9074762

Comments

U.S. government work

Abstract

Powder bed fusion (PBF) additive manufacturing (AM) provides a great level of flexibility in the design-driven build of metal products. However, the more complex the design, the more difficult it becomes to control the quality of AM builds. The quality challenge persistently hampers the widespread application of AM technology. Advanced imaging (e.g., X-ray computed tomography scans and high-resolution optical images) has been increasingly explored to enhance the visibility of information and improve the AM quality control. Realizing the full potential of imaging data depends on the advent of information processing methodologies for the analysis of design-quality interactions. This paper presents a design of AM experiment to investigate how design parameters (e.g., build orientation, thin-wall width, thin-wall height, and contour space) interact with quality characteristics in thin-wall builds. Note that the build orientation refers to the position of thin-walls in relation to the recoating direction on the plate, and the contour space indicates the width between rectangle hatches. First, we develop a novel generalized recurrence network (GRN) to represent the AM spatial image data. Then, GRN quantifiers, namely degree, betweenness, pagerank, closeness, and eigenvector centralities, are extracted to characterize the quality of layerwise builds. Further, we establish a regression model to predict how the design complexity impacts GRN behaviors in each layer of thin-wall builds. Experimental results show that network features are sensitive to build orientations, width, height, and contour space under the significant level α = 0.05. Thin-walls with the width bigger than 0.1 mm printed under orientation 0° are found to yield better quality compared to 60° and 90°. Also, thin-walls build with orientation 60° are more sensitive to the changes in contour space compare to the other two orientations. As a result, the orientation 60° should be avoided while printing thin-wall structures. The proposed design-quality analysis shows great potential to optimize engineering design and enhance the quality of PBF-AM builds.

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