Additive manufacturing (AM) refers to class of computer-aided manufacturing processes in which a three-dimensional metal article is built layer-by-layer to its final geometric shape using digital design data to coordinate the incremental creation of the article. One type of AM process is known as bound metal deposition. In bound metal deposition, an extrudable thermoplastic deposition medium, which includes metal particles dispersed within a binder material, is heated and then repeatedly and consecutively deposited one individual cross-sectional layer at a time to form a preform of the metal article being produced. The preform, once complete, is an enlarged replica of the final intended metal article and is comprised of the accumulated metal particles and binder material that have been deposited, with the binder material physically binding the metal particles together into a “green part.” The preform then undergoes a debinding procedure in which at least some of the binder material is removed to leave the preform is a porous, semi-fragile state typically referred to as a “brown part.” At this point, the preform is sintered via heating to remove any remaining binder material and to fuse the metal particles together. During sintering, the preform densifies, shrinks, and transforms into the metal article. Current bound metal deposition techniques, however, are not able to quickly and efficiently fabricate metal articles that possess non-uniform metal compositions, physical properties, and/or mechanical properties.
A method of additively manufacturing a monolithic metal article having a three-dimensional shape according to practices of the present disclosure includes several steps. In one step, a preform of the article is formed that includes atomized metal particles bound together by a binder material. The atomized metal particles comprise (1) water atomized metal particles and (2) gas atomized metal particles, plasma atomized metal particles, or a mixture of gas atomized metal particles and plasma atomized metal particles. In another step, at least some of the binder material is removed from the preform. And, in yet another step, the preform is sintered to remove any remaining binder material and to fuse the metal particles together in the solid state to thereby densify and transform the preform into the monolithic metal article.
The aforementioned method may include additional steps or be further defined. For example, the water atomized metal particles may be composed of one of steel, iron, iron-carbon alloy, aluminum alloy, cobalt alloy, copper, brass, bronze, tin, zinc, cadmium, tungsten, titanium, or rhenium, and, likewise, the gas atomized metal particles, plasma atomized metal particles, or the mixture of gas atomized metal particles and plasma atomized metal particles may be composed of one of steel, iron, iron-carbon alloy, aluminum alloy, cobalt alloy, copper, brass, bronze, tin, zinc, cadmium, tungsten, titanium, or rhenium. The water atomized metal particles and the gas atomized metal particles, plasma atomized metal particles, or the mixture of gas atomized metal particles and plasma atomized metal particles may be composed of the same metal. Alternatively, the water atomized metal particles and the gas atomized metal particles, plasma atomized metal particles, or the mixture of gas atomized metal particles and plasma atomized metal particles may be composed of different metals. In one implementation of the method, the monolithic metal article may be an automotive component part selected from the group consisting of a cylinder liner, an intake valve, an exhaust valve, a piston, a connecting rod, a piston ring, an engine block, a transmission housing, a gear shaft, a sleeve, and a washer.
Additionally, the step of forming the preform may include depositing a first set of consecutive cross-sectional layers of the preform to form a first portion of the preform. Each of the cross-sectional layers of the first set is deposited from a first extrudable deposition medium. Similarly, the step of forming the preform may include depositing a second set of consecutive cross-sectional layers of the preform to form a second portion of the preform adjacent to and contiguous with the first portion of the preform. Each of the cross-sectional layers of the second set is deposited from a second extrudable deposition medium. Furthermore, the first extrudable deposition medium or the second extrudable deposition medium comprises water atomized metal particles, and the other of the first deposition medium or the second deposition medium comprises gas atomized metal particles, plasma atomized metal particles, or a mixture of gas atomized metal particles and plasma atomized metal particles. The step of forming the preform may, if desired, further include depositing a third set of consecutive cross-sectional layers of the preform to form a third portion of the preform adjacent to and contiguous with the second portion of the preform. Each of the cross-sectional layers of the third set is deposited from the first extrudable deposition medium or from a third extrudable deposition medium that is different from the first and second extrudable deposition mediums.
Another method of additively manufacturing a monolithic metal article having a three-dimensional shape according to practices of the present disclosure may include several steps. In one step, a preform of the article is formed by consecutively depositing a plurality of cross-sectional layers of the preform to thereby build the preform layer-by-layer upwardly from a build surface. The preform comprises atomized metal particles bound together by a binder material and, further, the preform includes a first portion and a second portion that is adjacent to and contiguous with the first portion. The first portion or the second portion comprises water atomized metal particles, and the other of the first portion or the second portion comprises gas atomized metal particles, plasma atomized metal particles, or a mixture of gas atomized metal particles and plasma atomized metal particles. In another step, at least some of the binder material is removed from the preform. And, in yet another step, the preform is sintered to remove any remaining binder material and to fuse the metal particles together in the solid state to thereby densify and transform the preform into the monolithic metal article.
The aforementioned method may include additional steps or be further defined. For instance, the step of forming the preform may include depositing a first set of consecutive cross-sectional layers of the preform to form the first portion of the preform, and depositing a second set of consecutive cross-sectional layers of the preform to form the second portion of the preform. Each of the cross-sectional layers of the first set is deposited from a first extrudable deposition medium, and each of the cross-sectional layers of the second set is deposited from a second extrudable deposition medium. The first extrudable deposition medium or the second extrudable deposition medium comprises water atomized metal particles, and the other of the first deposition medium or the second deposition medium comprises gas atomized metal particles, plasma atomized metal particles, or a mixture of gas atomized metal particles and plasma atomized metal particles. Additionally, if desired, the step of forming the preform may include depositing a third set of consecutive cross-sectional layers of the preform to form a third portion of the preform adjacent to and contiguous with the second portion of the preform. Each of the cross-sectional layers of the third set is deposited from the first extrudable deposition medium or from a third extrudable deposition medium that is different from the first and second extrudable deposition mediums. In some implementations of the method, each of the plurality of cross-sectional layers of the preform has a thickness ranging from 50 μm to 250 μm. The manufactured monolithic metal article produced from the aforementioned method includes a first region derived from the first portion of the preform and a second region derived from the second region of the preform. The first region of the metal article has a density that is different from a density of the second region of the metal article.
Still another method of additively manufacturing a monolithic metal article having a three-dimensional shape according to practices of the present disclosure may include several steps. In one step, a preform of the article is formed that includes metal particles bound together by a binder material. This step involves depositing a first set of consecutive cross-sectional layers of the preform to form a first portion of the preform, and depositing a second set of consecutive cross-sectional layers of the preform to form a second portion of the preform adjacent to and contiguous with the first portion of the preform. Each of the cross-sectional layers of the first set is deposited from a first extrudable deposition medium, and each of the cross-sectional layers of the second set is deposited from a second extrudable deposition medium. The first extrudable deposition medium or the second extrudable deposition medium comprises water atomized metal particles, and the other of the first deposition medium or the second deposition medium comprises gas atomized metal particles, plasma atomized metal particles, or a mixture of gas atomized metal particles and plasma atomized metal particles. In another step, at least some of the binder material is removed from the preform by immersing the preform in a dissolution liquid or by heating the preform. And, in yet another step, the preform is sintered to remove any remaining binder material and to fuse the metal particles together in the solid state to thereby densify and transform the preform into the monolithic metal article.
The aforementioned method may include additional steps or be further defined. For example, the water atomized metal particles are composed of one of steel, iron, iron-carbon alloy, aluminum alloy, cobalt alloy, copper, brass, bronze, tin, zinc, cadmium, tungsten, titanium, or rhenium, and the gas atomized metal particles, plasma atomized metal particles, or the mixture of gas atomized metal particles and plasma atomized metal particles are composed of one of steel, iron, iron-carbon alloy, aluminum alloy, cobalt alloy, copper, brass, bronze, tin, zinc, cadmium, tungsten, titanium, or rhenium. Also, the monolithic metal article produced from the aforementioned method includes a first region derived from the first portion of the preform and a second region derived from the second region of the preform. The first region of the metal article has a density that is different from a density of the second region of the metal article.
The present disclosure relates to the manufacture of three-dimensionally shaped monolithic metal articles by way of additive manufacturing and, in particular, by way of a variation of bound metal deposition that uses at least two different sources of metal particles to prepare a preform. This permits the metal article derived from the preform to contain regions in which the metal composition, physical properties, and/or mechanical properties are different. The additively manufactured metal article may therefore have certain select characteristics in certain regions based on its intended function, which can allow for the mass and functional performance of the metal article to be better optimized. The monolithic metal article manufactured by the present bound metal deposition process may be any of a wide variety of metal components. For example, the metal article may be an automotive component part that is simple or complex in overall shape and surface contour. Some specific automotive component parts that may be fabricated include a cylinder liner—which is shown in the figures and described below as an illustrative embodiment of the present disclosure—as well as other component parts such as an intake valve, an exhaust valve, a piston, a connecting rod, a piston ring, an engine block, a transmission housing, a gear shaft, a sleeve, and a washer.
To carry out the disclosed bound metal deposition method, the atomized metal particles used to additively manufacture the monolithic metal article are supplied from at least two different sources of atomized metal particles. Whether or not the sources of atomized metal particles are different for purposes of the present disclosure depends on the atomization process employed to produce the metal particles. In general, there are three categories of atomization processes that can produce atomized metal particles: (1) water atomization; (2) gas atomization; and (3) plasma atomization. Atomized metal particles that have been produced by any one of those categories of atomization processes are thus considered to be from a different source than atomized metal particles produced from any of the other two categories of atomization processes. This is true for purposes of the present disclosure even if the atomized metal particles produced by the distinctive atomization processes have the same chemical composition. For example, atomized metal particles produced by gas atomization are considered to be from a different source than atomized metal powders produced by water atomization or plasma atomization, regardless of the composition of the metal particles sourced from each process.
The water atomization, gas atomization, and plasma atomization processes are illustrated broadly in
Referring now to
Referring now to
In each of the atomization processes described above, the atomized metal particles produced have a distribution of sizes. The collected atomized particles may be separated into a size range that is most suitable for bound metal deposition by a variety of techniques. A simple and reliable technique for obtaining atomized metal particles of a desired size is through sieving. To carry out the presently-disclosed bound metal deposition process, the atomized metal particles—whether produced by way of water atomization, gas atomization, or plasma atomization—preferably have a largest size dimension that ranges from 10 μm to 70 μm or, more narrowly, from 15 μm to 50 μm. Atomized metal particles falling in this size range are generally favored since they possess satisfactory fluidity and can be tightly compacted together during sintering to achieve a high percentage of theoretical density. In that regard, when performing the bound metal deposition process of the present disclosure, the differently-sourced atomized metal particles preferably, but not necessarily, have a particle size distribution within the range of 10 μm to 70.
The bound metal deposition process of the present disclosure involves forming a preform of the article by consecutively depositing a plurality of cross-sectional layers of the preform to thereby build the preform layer-by-layer upwardly from a build surface. Each of the plurality of layers is extruded and deposited from an extrudable deposition medium that includes metal particles dispersed within a binder material. The metal particles included in the extrudable deposition medium may include those of steel, iron, iron-carbon alloy, aluminum alloy, cobalt alloy, copper, brass, bronze, tin, zinc, cadmium, tungsten, titanium, or rhenium, and the binder material may be a mixture of a thermoplastic polymer and wax. At least two different extrudable deposition mediums are used in order to provide the differently-sourced metal particles into the preform at the desired locations. Each of the deposited cross-sectional layers is typically deposited to a thickness that ranges from 50 μm to 250 μm. In addition to the preform, a raft and preform supports may be fabricated beforehand from at least one of the extrudable deposition mediums to support the building process in known fashion.
When forming the preform according to a preferred practice of the present disclosure, at the very minimum, each of a first set of consecutively deposited cross-sectional layers is composed of a first extrudable deposition medium to provide a first portion of the preform and, likewise, each of a second set of consecutively deposited cross-sectional layers is composed of a second extrudable deposition medium to provide a second portion of the preform that is contiguous with and adjacent to the first portion. The first extrudable deposition medium or the second extrudable deposition medium comprises water atomized metal particles, and the other of the first deposition medium or the second deposition medium comprises gas atomized metal particles, plasma atomized metal particles, or a mixture of gas atomized metal particles and plasma atomized metal particles. In this way, the metal particles contained within the first and second portions of the preform are differently-sourced metal particles. The metal particles included in the first and second extrudable deposition mediums may have the same or different compositions. If the metal particles in the two mediums are different, the two types of metal particles should be compatible—that is, the metal that constitutes the metal particles in the first extrudable deposition medium and the metal that constitutes the metal particles in the second extrudable deposition medium can metallurgically bond together and have similar mechanical and thermal properties such as steel-steel (as between different steels), steel-iron, steel-aluminum, and steel-cobalt alloy.
As will be explained in more detail below, the several different portions developed in the preform based on a difference in metal particle sources will ultimately manifest themselves as different regions of the monolithic metal article. These regions are distinguishable by differences in density. In particular, if the metal particles in the first portion of the preform are water atomized and the metal particles in the adjacent second portion are gas and/or plasma atomized, but the compositions of the particles are otherwise the same in both portions (e.g., the water atomized particle sand gas/plasma atomized particles are all composed of the same type of steel), the differences in shape between the water and gas/plasma atomized particles will nonetheless provide their corresponding regions of the metal article with different densities. In another implementation, if the metal particles in the first portion of the preform are composed of one composition, and the metal particles in the adjacent second portion are composed of another composition (e.g., the metal particles in the first portion are steel and the metal particles in the second portion are iron), the differences in shape between the water and gas/plasma atomized particles as well as the differences in mass of the distinct metal particle compositions will provide their corresponding regions of the metal article with different densities.
The preform may include only the first and second portions or, if desired, it may include additional portions. For example, each of a third set of consecutively deposited cross-sectional layers may provide a third portion of the preform that is contiguous with and adjacent to the second portion of the preform. Each of the third set of consecutively deposited cross-sectional layers may be composed of a third extrudable deposition medium that is different from the first and second deposition mediums, or, alternatively, in some implementations, each of the third set of layers may be composed of the first deposition medium if the intent is to sandwich the second portion of the preform between two otherwise identically-composed portions of the preform. The preform may include any number of portions identifiable by the source of the metal particles contained therein. In this way, the monolithic metal article formed by the presently-disclosed bound metal deposition process can have certain select regions that have compositional, physical, and/or mechanical properties tailored for one purpose while other select regions can have composition, physical, and/or mechanical more tailored for another purpose.
Once the preform is formed completely, at which point it is commonly referred to as a “green part,” the preform is subjected to a debinding procedure in which at least some, typically 30 wt % to 70 wt %, of the binder material in the preform is removed. The debinding of the preform may be performed by immersing the preform in a dissolution liquid that can dissolve the binder material. For instance, the dissolution liquid may include acetone, heptane, trichloroethylene, or water, to name but a few examples. Satisfactory debinding may also be carried out in some instances by heating the preform to thermally decompose and drive off at least some of binder material. During debinding, the porosity of the preform increases as the amount of the remaining binding material decreases. When the debinding procedure is complete, the preform, which is now commonly referred to as a “brown part,” is semi-fragile and porous, but is still able to maintain is shape. The preform is then sintered. The sintering of the preform involves heating the preform to near-melting in an oven, a furnace, a lehr, or some other heating device to remove any remaining binder material and to fuse the metal particles together. Notably, during sintering, the preform densifies, shrinks, and transforms into the final monolithic metal article. It is not uncommon for the monolithic metal article to have a volume that is 10-25% less than the preform just prior to sintering.
The presently-disclosed bound metal deposition process is exemplified below in the context of the manufacture of a particular automotive component part. Referring now to
Referring now to
In this embodiment, the first cartridge 86 is comprised of a first extrudable deposition medium that includes gas atomized metal particles and/or plasma atomized metal particles bound by a first binder material, and the second cartridge 88 is comprised of a second extrudable deposition medium that includes water atomized metal particles bound by a second binder material. Each of the first and second cartridges 86, 88 may be in the form of a rod (as shown) or some other handleable and feedable shape. The metal particles included in the first and second cartridges 86, 88 may be the same or different in terms of composition. For example, the metal particles included in the first cartridge 86 may be gas atomized, plasma atomized, or a mixture of gas atomized and plasma atomized steel particles that, as explained above, are spherically shaped, while the metal particles included in the second cartridge 88 may be water atomized particles of the same steel composition. The steel particles in each cartridge 86, 86 may be a 1080 low carbon alloy steel that contains 0.75 wt % to 0.88 wt % carbon along with manganese and, optionally, sulfur and/or phosphorus. In other implementations, the metal particles included in the first cartridge 86 may be steel particles, such as those of the low carbon alloy steel just described, and the metal particles included in the second cartridge 88 may be a different steel alloy, such as a 1010 low carbon alloy steel that contains 0.080 wt % to 0.13 wt % carbon along with manganese and, optionally, sulfur and/or phosphorus.
The manufacture of the cylinder liner 66 is illustrated generally in
After the first portion 102 of the preform 96 has been formed, and referring now to
Following the formation of the second portion 108 of the preform 96, and referring now to
Once all three portions 102, 108, 114 of the preform 96 have been formed, the completed preform 96 is ready for debinding and sintering. The transformation of the preform 96 into the cylinder liner 66 is illustrated in
The preform 96 is moved away from the bound metal deposition apparatus 78 and subjected to debinding. As mentioned above, this typically involves immersing the preform 96 in a dissolution liquid—examples of which include acetone, heptane, trichloroethylene, or water—to dissolve at least some of the binder material or, alternatively, heating the preform 96 to thermally decompose and drive off at least some of binder material. The removed binding material is depicted in
The monolithic metal cylinder liner 66 includes three distinct regions—namely, a first region 132, a second region 134, and a third region 136—that correspond in relative proportionate sizes and location to the three portions 102, 108, 114 of the preform 96. These regions 132, 134, 136 exist, in part, due to the differences in the shape of the atomized metal particles included in the corresponding regions 102, 108, 114 of the preform 96 and their ability to densify. In particular, during sintering, the metal particles included in each of the portions 102, 108, 114 of the preform 96 fuse and densify, typically to about 95% to 99.8% of the theoretical density of the metal composition of which the particles are composed. The spherical shape of gas atomized and plasma atomized particles permits those particles to generally achieve a higher percentage of theoretical density compared to the water atomized metal particles and their irregular shape. In that regard, a density of each of the first and third regions 132, 136 of the cylinder liner 66, which are derived from gas and/or plasma atomized particles, is different than a density of the second region 134 of the liner 66, which is derived from water atomized metal particles. Specifically, the density of the second portion 134 of the cylinder liner 66 is less than the density of each of the first and third regions 132, 134 of the liner 66, even though the entire liner 66 may be manufactured from steel.
The three regions 132, 134, 136 of the cylinder liner 66 may provide the liner 66 with enhanced performance capabilities. The cylinder liner 66, by its very nature, must have good wear-resistance, so that it can accommodate the high-speed reciprocal sliding action of the piston head 72 (
The fabrication of the cylinder liner 66 using the presently-disclosed bound metal deposition process described above is one example of how an article with discernible regions having varying metal compositional, physical, and/or mechanical properties can be additively manufactured. The same general process may be applied to a host of other articles, including other automotive component parts, to achieve discernible regions optimized for the particular function of those other articles as well. Moreover, the specific bound metal deposition process described above is subject to some variation without compromising its ability to fabricate the cylinder liner 66 or any other article. For example, rather than using separate first and second extruder nozzles 82, 84 to deposit cross-sectional layers comprised of the first extrudable deposition medium and the second extrudable deposition medium, respectively, a single extruder nozzle may be used instead. In such a scenario, cartridges of the first extrudable deposition medium and the second extrudable deposition medium could simply be exchanged for each other whenever a change in the extrudable deposition medium deposited by the single extruder nozzle is desired. Accordingly, the above description of preferred exemplary embodiments and specific examples are merely descriptive in nature; they are not intended to limit the scope of the claims that follow. Each of the terms used in the appended claims should be given its ordinary and customary meaning unless specifically and unambiguously stated otherwise in the specification.