Materials & Design (Mar 2017)

Laser diode area melting for high speed additive manufacturing of metallic components

  • Miguel Zavala-Arredondo,
  • Nicholas Boone,
  • Jon Willmott,
  • David T.D. Childs,
  • Pavlo Ivanov,
  • Kristian M. Groom,
  • Kamran Mumtaz

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 117
pp. 305 – 315

Abstract

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Additive manufacturing processes have been developed to a stage where they can now be routinely used to manufacture net-shape high-value components. Selective Laser Melting (SLM) comprises of either a single or multiple deflected high energy fibre laser source(s) to raster scan, melt and fuse layers of metallic powdered feedstock. However this deflected laser raster scanning methodology is high cost, energy inefficient and encounters significant limitations on output productivity due to the rate of feedstock melting.This work details the development of a new additive manufacturing process known as Diode Area Melting (DAM). This process utilises customised architectural arrays of low power laser diode emitters for high speed parallel processing of metallic feedstock. Individually addressable diode emitters are used to selectively melt feedstock from a pre-laid powder bed. The laser diodes operate at shorter laser wavelengths (808 nm) than conventional SLM fibre lasers (1064 nm) theoretically enabling more efficient energy absorption for specific materials. The melting capabilities of the DAM process were tested for low melting point eutectic BiZn2.7 elemental powders and higher temperature pre-alloyed 17-4 stainless steel powder. The process was shown to be capable of fabricating controllable geometric features with evidence of complete melting and fusion between multiple powder layers. Keywords: Selective laser melting, Additive manufacturing, Direct metal laser sintering, Laser diode, Advanced manufacturing, High speed