Materials & Design (Nov 2020)
A digital-based approach for characterising spread powder layer in additive manufacturing
Abstract
Assessing the quality of a spread powder layer is critical to understanding powder spreadability in additive manufacturing. However, the small layer thickness presents a great challenge for a systematic and consistent characterisation of the spread powder layer. In this study, a novel digital-based characterisation approach is proposed based on space discretization, with an emphasis on the characteristics that is important to powder-bed-based additive manufacturing. With the developed approach, the spread powder layer can be qualitatively illustrated by contour maps and quantified by statistics of packing density, surface profile and pore characteristics. For the first time, two types of pores are proposed for the spread powder layer. The density pore can identify those less populated areas while the chamber pore is able to quantify the size of empty patches observed in the spread powder bed. Applicability of this approach is demonstrated via both simulation-generated and experimentally spread powder layers. Sensitivity tests on the sampling parameters are conducted. This digital-based characterisation method is general and can be applied to both polydisperse and non-spherical particle systems, not only enriching detailed structural analysis of the spread powder layer but also allowing us to quantitatively evaluate powder spreadability in additive manufacturing.