The invention relates to a deposition print head, a deposition print head assembly, a deposition printer and a method of controlling the deposition print head.
Deposition print heads are known in printers for depositing fluid material on a solid surface. A well-known example is a deposition print head in a three dimensional printer which deposits a molten material to be deposited on a solidified body of the same or a similar material. While controlling the position of the deposition print head in space, the deposition print head can for example be used for creating three dimensional objects.
Deposition print heads known in the art can comprise a heating element, a feed connected to the heating element for the material to deposit, such as plastic material, and a nozzle connected to the heating element. The heating element can comprise a heat source and a heater body and a filament channel through the heater body from the feed to the nozzle for heating depositing material which is guided through the filament channel.
A problem with such a deposition print head is that the heating element body needs to be maintained at a suitable temperature so that the depositing material obtains the right consistency. The heating element body has a certain heat capacity and needs to be in a constant heated state while printing, even while intermittently printing. This causes undesired oozing of molten filament material and thereby fouling a deposition printer comprising the deposition print head. Furthermore continuous heating of filament material can cause material degeneration.
Moreover, intermittent operation of such a heater would cause a delay in operating the deposition print head, since if the heater is turned off during printing for saving energy, it needs to be reheated. Due to the heat capacity of the heating element body this would take some time.
Furthermore the heating element body needs a certain heat capacity in order to maintain its operating temperature, causing a minimal size for the heating element and thereby limiting a number of depositing print heads on a deposition print head support. Plural deposition print heads are desired for allowing an object to be printed in different colors and/or materials, without manual intervention for changing print heads.
It is therefore an object of the invention to overcome the disadvantages in the deposition print heads in the art.
The object is achieved in a depositing print head comprising a non-susceptive or low susceptive sleeve, a susceptive element having a filament channel, the susceptive element arranged inside the sleeve, wherein the susceptive element is susceptive to a magnetic field. The filament channel is for feeding a thermoplastic filament in a feed direction. The depositing print head further comprises an exciter arranged around the susceptive element, wherein the exciter is arranged for generating a magnetic field compatible with the susceptive element. The depositing print head further comprises a nozzle attached to one end of the susceptive element.
By applying an alternating electric current or voltage to the exciter, the exciter is activated. It will generate an alternating magnetic field compatible with the susceptive element.
The magnetic field allows the susceptive element to be heated without direct wired contact to an electric power supply.
In an embodiment, the susceptive element comprises a ferromagnetic material having a field reluctance causing a hysteresis in response to the alternating magnetic field, causing the susceptive element to heat up. The heated susceptive element subsequently heats up the thermoplastic filament. By supplying sufficient energy to the exciter, the susceptive element reaches a temperature for melting the thermoplastic material of the filament. By feeding the filament through the filament channel, the molten filament material is extruded through the nozzle opening. The extruded molten filament material can be deposited on an object to be created, where it solidifies or cures.
The susceptive element has a low heat capacity, allowing fast response to excitation by the exciter. Thus deposition printing can be performed intermittently without continuously heating up the thermoplastic filament material. Exciting the susceptive element can be accurately timed while feeding the filament, thus preventing oozing or other filament material loss.
In an embodiment according to the invention, the susceptive element comprises a low conductive material. Heating is achieved by eddy currents in the susceptive element material. The use of a magnetic field allows advantageous use of skin effect on the susceptive element material such that the susceptive element heats up at its surface.
In a further embodiment, the low conductive material is applied at an inner wall of the susceptive element, thus allowing the generated heat to be transferred to the filament in the filament channel.
In an embodiment according to the invention, the exciter is arranged around the sleeve. This allows the exciter to be clear, i.e. insulated from the heated susceptive element.
In an embodiment according to the invention, the exciter comprises an induction coil wound around the sleeve. This allows a magnetic field to be generated inside the windings of the coil for exciting the magnetically susceptive element corresponding to the exciter.
In an embodiment according to the invention, the sleeve comprises an insulating, low susceptive material with high heat shock resistance. This allows intermittent operation of the deposition print head, intermittently exciting the susceptive element to a high temperature.
Preferably, the low susceptive material of the sleeve comprises quarts glass.
In an embodiment according to the invention, the sleeve comprises at least one additional susceptive element, the exciter overlapping the at least one additional susceptive element. Multiple susceptive elements allow the filament material to be subjected to a temperature profile. This allows for example to gradually increase the filament material to a melting temperature.
In an embodiment according to the invention, the deposition print head further comprises a spacing element between each pair of susceptive elements. This allows buffering of the thermoplastic filament material. The spacing element acts as a buffer to keep a continuous steady flow of filament material towards the nozzle.
In a further embodiment according to the invention, the spacing element comprises a temperature sensor. The temperature sensor allows the use of a control circuit to control a temperature of a susceptive element preceding or succeeding the spacing element in the feeding direction of the thermoplastic filament.
In an embodiment according to the invention, the exciter is subdivided in a portion per each susceptive element. This allows control of energy transfer per each portion of the exciter, such that a pre-defined temperature profile is achieved.
In an embodiment according to the invention the exciter has a different energy transfer ratio for each portion of the exciter. The exciter can be supplied as a single unit, where the portions each transfer a pre-determined amount of energy to the respective corresponding susceptive element.
In an embodiment according to the invention, the exciter has a different number of windings for each portion of the exciter. This is advantageous for an inductive susceptive element and exciter combination where the exciter is manufactured as an induction coil. Less windings causes a lower energy transfer, a higher number of windings causes a higher energy transfer level.
In an embodiment according to the invention, each exciter portion is separated from another exciter portion. This allows separate energy transfer control for each portion. Thus different temperature profiles can be generated for the filament while being fed through the deposition print head, without changing a hardware configuration of the printer.
In an embodiment according to the invention, each exciter portion has a separately controllable power supply. Induction coils can easily be controlled by varying at least one of current, voltage and frequency of the supply.
In an embodiment according to the invention, the nozzle comprises a susceptive material which is the same as the susceptive material of the susceptive element. This allows the nozzle to be heated by an extension of the exciter, or by a separate exciter. This helps the molten filament material to remain in a molten state until it is extruded from the nozzle. This also allows the deposition print head to start up by melting filament material inside the nozzle after a prolonged state of inactivity, when the filament material has already solidified.
In an embodiment according to the invention, the nozzle is attached to one end of the susceptive element. This prevents the molten filament material to leak towards the inside of the sleeve and/or to the outside of the deposition print head.
In another aspect of the invention, the object is achieved in a deposition print head assembly comprising a support structure and at least one deposition print head as described above.
In another aspect of the invention, the object is achieved in a deposition printer, comprising holding means for holding an article to be deposition printed, positioning means, and control means for controlling a position of the positioning means, and a deposition print head assembly as described above. The deposition printer further has a temperature controller for controlling at least one filament channel element temperature.
The object is also achieved according to another object of the invention in a method of deposition printing, comprising intermittently activating an exciter while feeding thermoplastic filament in a feed direction in a deposition print head as described above.
In an embodiment according to the invention, the deposition print head comprises a plurality of susceptive elements. The method further comprises activating the respective exciters for each susceptive element at a different energy level.
In an embodiment according to the invention, the method further comprises activating the respective exciters for each susceptive element at a different energy level according to a temperature profile.
In an embodiment according to the invention, the temperature profile has an ascending temperature slope and subsequently a descending temperature slope in the feed direction. This allows gradual and homogeneous heating of the filament material.
In an embodiment according to the invention, the method further comprises first preheating the thermoplastic filament to a gel temperature, second preheating the thermoplastic filament to a temperature above a melt temperature, third heating the thermoplastic filament to the melt temperature. This last step maintains the thermoplastic filament at the melt temperature.
In an embodiment according to the invention, the method further comprises buffering the thermoplastic filament between second preheating and the third heating. This allows the thermoplastic material of the filament to heat up in a portion of the filament channel while passing through a susceptive element to obtain a homogeneous and suitable viscosity in the spacing element. This compensates for irregularities of a cross section of the thermoplastic filament, which may not be constant.
In a further embodiment according to the invention, the method further comprises controlling a filament channel temperature. This allows accurate implementation of temperature profiles along the filament channel. This makes the deposition print head according to the invention versatile, adaptable and applicable for different filament materials
The exciter 105 can be an induction coil combined with a ferromagnetic tubular element as susceptive element 103. Ferromagnetic materials for the susceptive element 103 include iron, iron alloys. Also materials with low conductivity can be used such as steel, carbon, tin, tungsten, which cause heating up by means of eddy currents induced by the magnetic field from the exciter 105.
When activated using an alternating voltage or current supply, the exciter generates an alternating magnetic field. The susceptive element 103 captures the alternating magnetic field. Due to hysteresis of the ferromagnetic material of the susceptive element 103 and/or the eddy currents as described, the susceptive element 103 heats up. The thus heated susceptive element 103 heats the thermoplastic filament fed through the filament channel 104 to a melting temperature of the thermoplastic material of the filament. The feeding causes sufficient pressure to cause the molten filament to be pressed towards the nozzle 106, where it is extruded. By continuous positioning the deposition print head 100 according to a predetermined pattern, the extrusion can be used for depositing the molten thermoplastic material, which when allowed to solidify, forms small portions i.e. layers on an object to be formed. By gradually forming these layers a complete object can be formed.
A space 109 between the susceptive element 103 and the sleeve 102 allows reduction of heat transfer from the susceptive element 103 to the sleeve 102. The induction coil 105 is made from windings of for example copper wire. In alternative embodiment, the coil 105 can be integrated in the sleeve.
The tubular portion 201 and rims 202 can be manufactured from an insulating temperature shock resistant material such as quartz glass or a ceramic material, having an inner layer of the ferromagnetic and/or low conductive material as described. Alternatively, the tubular portion 201 and rims 202 can be manufactured from the ferromagnetic and/or low conductive material as described
The sleeve 102 has an outer diameter d4>d3 providing sufficient wall thickness for thermal insulation of the susceptive element 103 to protect the surroundings of sleeve 102.
The sleeve 102 is made of a thermally insulating and heat shock resistant material. Preferably quartz glass is used. Possible alternatives include ceramic material.
RF-signals for exciting the ferromagnetic susceptive elements 103 can have a frequency in a wide range of hundreds of kilohertz to several Megahertz or tens of Megahertz, which frequency range depends on the material and layer thickness, and/or resistivity of the susceptive element material.
In the example of
By varying the excitation, i.e. energy transfer, from the exciter 105 to the different susceptive elements 103, the temperature level may vary indicated by the dotted line in
The sensing elements 701 comprise an annular body 704 from for example the same material as the spacing elements 108 and have a filament channel 104 in communication with the filament channel 104 of the susceptive elements 103 and the spacing elements 108. The temperature sensor 702 is positioned in a cavity 703 such that the sensor is in close proximity to the filament channel 104. The temperature sensor 702 can be a resistive temperature device (RTD) such as for example a PT100 element.
The sensing elements 701 are suitable for measuring the filament temperatures T1 and T2 respectively.
A set temperature 801 is compared with a measured temperature 812 by temperature sensor 811 corresponding to sensor 702 in
The embodiments described above are intended as examples only, not limiting the scope of protection of the claims as set out below.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2014044 | Dec 2014 | NL | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/EP2015/081162 | 12/23/2015 | WO | 00 |