Additive manufacturing (i.e., 3D printing) has become an extremely popular method for producing parts, from prototypes to commercial production. There are many types of additive manufacturing systems and methods that have been developed. Some types utilize a vat containing a photosensitive polymer (i.e., photopolymer), where layers of the 3D printed part are grown upon each other within the vat. The photopolymer cross-links and hardens upon exposure to photopolymerization wavelengths of light, changing the liquid resin into a solid polymeric material. These photoreactive 3D printing systems typically include a resin pool, an illumination system, and a print platform, where the illumination system projects an image into the resin pool causing a layer of a polymeric object to be formed on the print platform. The print platform then moves the printed layer out of the focal plane of the illumination system, and then the next layer is exposed (i.e., printed). Some systems use a “top-down” approach where the light exposes an upper surface of the resin, and then the print platform moves down into the vat so that the next layer can be built. Other systems are “bottom-up” where the light is projected through a transparent bottom surface of the resin pool, and then the print platform moves up, away from the bottom surface, as the part continues to be formed.
3D printing enables customized fabrication of parts, both structurally and in their material composition. One area in which 3D printing is utilized is for foams, such as in footwear, packaging, thermal insulation and other applications. Foams can be printed in open or closed cell foam configurations, in lattice-type structures or bubble configurations, and with tunable properties both locally and globally. In one example application, polyurethane foams are a common material used for creation of midsoles and other elements in footwear. For footwear, 3D printing enables customization advantages such as printing a lattice structure that varies in different regions of the midsole to impart specific cushioning and support properties in those regions.
Another developing area for the use of additive manufacturing is for parts that can transform. In this field, which is sometimes referred to as 4D printing, parts are additively manufactured with a structure that changes over time when exposed to an activation stimulus. The stimulus may be, for example, heat, cooling, light, or electricity. In one example, laminate structures have been produced in which fibers are placed into composite layers of a flat part, and an activation unit causes the composite structure to become curved. In another example, a lattice structure has active members that can self-transform when exposed to a stimulus, causing the part to change shape. Biomaterials is another area in which 4D printing is being applied, often using shape memory alloys and polymers or other “smart” materials (e.g., composites, hydrogels) in which the materials self-transform in response to a stimulus.
In embodiments, a method of creating additive manufactured parts from expanding foam material includes printing a part made of an expandable foam, using an additive manufacturing system. The expandable foam is printed in an unexpanded state and has a closed layer at an external surface of the part. The method includes controlling expansion of the part, using the additive manufacturing system, wherein the controlling of the expansion is performed after the printing.
In embodiments, a method of creating additive manufactured parts from expanding foam material includes modeling an expansion of a part made of an expandable foam. The method also includes printing the part made of the expandable foam, using an automated additive manufacturing system and according to the modeling. The expandable foam is printed in an unexpanded state and has a closed layer at an external surface of the part.
The present disclosure describes methods and systems for producing foam parts that are additively manufactured in a non-expanded state and later changed to an expanded state in a controlled manner. The expandability of the material is created by incorporating a foaming agent into a photopolymer, where the foaming agent is capable of producing voids/pores in the material when activated by a stimulus. The photopolymer is printed and cured, and then the foaming agent is activated after printing to expand gases within the printed material, thereby creating a foam structure. In some embodiments, the foaming agent contains gas in a gas form, where the gas is then expanded when activated by an activation stimulus. In some embodiments, the foaming agent has the capability of producing a gas, where the gas is created and expanded due to an activation stimulus. The expansion of the part may be controlled by an automated additive manufacturing system or may be designed to occur in a controlled manner after the part has been installed for use in the field. The parts have a closed exterior surface, such as having closed foam cells at its outer layer. The closed external surface beneficially avoids contamination of the microstructures inside the part. Printing the parts in an unexpanded state advantageously enables more parts to be produced on a build tray, thereby improving production rates. In some embodiments, the automated additive manufacturing system can control expansion of the part after printing, where the controlling can involve using sensors on the additive manufacturing machine or post-processing machines to provide feedback during the expansion.
Existing approaches for 3D printing of foams use microstructures (interconnected networks of cells), lattices, or other types of cell structures inside the foam material to achieve foam-like behavior, usually made from elastomeric materials which can be slow to print. Approaches purposely form the bubbles, voids, or open spaces from the structural geometry (e.g., lattices, cell walls), where the focus is on the geometry to create the sparseness. Known cell-type structures for foams can be open or closed cell, where in open cell structures or lattices the cells remain open at the surface of the geometry extents. Open cell structures present a disadvantage of having accessible voids that can trap debris or other particulates, impacting the performance of the material. For example, a microstructure-based or open cell-based footwear material may trap dirt, mud, or other particles. In a further example, conventional sintering methods often deposit and fuse thermoplastic polyurethane powder and require the use of open cell approaches to remove unused powder after printing. Similarly, in conventional resin-based 3D printing, the open-cell approach is used in order to allow trapped resin to drain. Conventional lattices and other microstructures can fail over time due to, for example, debris captured in voids or fatigue/stresses in the mechanical structure itself. Consequently, traditional 3D printed materials can be limited in their reliability and durability.
The present disclosure addresses these problems with a 4D approach—printing in three dimensions with the additional dimension of time. Methods and systems involve printing foam parts in an unexpanded configuration to be expanded later, such as in the context of an automated additive manufacturing system or flow. In some embodiments, the unexpanded state can be an approximately solid material (photopolymer with unactivated foaming agent(s)). In other embodiments, the as-printed material can have some voids/pores that are created during printing, but with much of the foaming agents still unactivated such that the part has the capability to be expanded further later. The foam structures have a closed layer (i.e., a closed outer shell) in the unexpanded state, in which the layer stays closed after the expanding. The closed outer shell of the expanded part may be a closed-cell foam, where the interior of the part may or may not have closed cells as well. The foam material(s) (of the interior of the part and closed outer shell/layer) expand after printing, changing toward its intended final part dimensions, all while having sealed outer surfaces. The sealed outer surfaces may be permeable to gases that enter the structure as the foam expands. The foam expands due to expansion of gases creating gas pockets in the material, causing the structures of the foam (e.g., cell walls, lattice elements, other microstructures) to move apart from each other. The printed material elements of the foam both lengthen and move away from each other as gas is expanded within the material so that the void spaces of the cell volumes increase.
Embodiments allow the creation of sparsity in the printed part without the need to remove excess print material (e.g., resin or powder). That is, a part is printed as an approximately solid or mostly solid piece that becomes less dense and remains sealed at the outer geometry extents after expansion. Printing foam-like pieces in an unexpanded state enables a new benefit of printing more pieces in a shorter time since the unexpanded pieces are smaller than expanded pieces. Another benefit of printing parts in an unexpanded configuration is that it is possible to fit more parts on a build tray, resulting in less resin material waste since more parts are built in a vat of resin at the same time. Further benefits include that the parts can remain unexpanded until closer to their end-use stage or even after being installed in an end product. Keeping parts in an unexpanded state can provide cost savings across the supply chain such as in storage space (e.g., in a warehouse), inventory costs (e.g., less space required to store products), and shipping costs (e.g., smaller shipping containers can be utilized, or more dense utilization of standard shipping containers can be made possible). Embodiments use a combination of geometry and chemistry to attain cell-type materials similar to conventional foams.
Embodiments use an expandable foam material which is made of a photoreactive resin into which one or more foaming agents are embedded. The foaming agents are particles (e.g., microspheres) which contain gas within them or contain materials capable of producing a gas when activated. The foaming agent does not necessarily react with the resin but is mixed into the resin to be able to create a foaming effect at a later time. The resin (with foaming agent) is printed and then illuminated at a polymerization wavelength to polymerize the resin. When an expansion stimulus is applied after the part is printed, the gases in the foaming agent increase in volume, causing the part to expand. The cross-linked polymer stays intact during expansion, thus preserving the cells (e.g., closed cells of the closed external layer) of the foam-like structure. That is, cross-linked polymer that surrounds particles of foaming agent embedded within the polymer becomes the walls of the foam structure, elongating and enclosing open spaces created by the foaming agent as the foaming agent reacts in response to the activation stimulus.
For example, an activation stimulus can heat up the printed part, causing gases in the foaming agent (e.g., microspheres) to expand and therefore expanding the diameter of the microspheres within the printed material. In other words, in some embodiments a foaming capability of the printed material is activated when heated to a critical temperature to expand gas that is contained within the foaming agent. The heat may be applied by, for example, an oven, microwave source, or other energy source. In some embodiments, heat is generated from an exothermic reaction that is activated by exposing (e.g., submerging) the printed part in a different gas or liquid.
Photoreactive resins (i.e., photopolymers, photosensitive resins) that can be used include acrylates, epoxies, methacrylates, urethanes (e.g., aliphatic, hydrophobic, dendritic), silicones, vinyls, and combinations thereof. An example of a foaming agent that can be mixed into the photoreactive resins, in accordance with embodiments, includes polymer shells that encapsulate a gas, such as EXPANCEL® microspheres. The encapsulated gas is a gas pocket that expands when heated, thus creating a foamed material. The microspheres may be activated at temperatures of, for example, 80° C. to 170° C. and may have a final expanded diameter of, for example, 40 to 120 microns. Another example of foaming agents is metal foaming materials such as zirconium hydride (ZrH), where ZrH when heated produces Zr and hydrogen gas. The hydrogen gas is created and expands as a result of heat being applied to the part, creating gas pockets (cells in the foam) enclosed by the final shape of the zirconium. Another example of a foaming agent that can be used in accordance with some embodiments is isocyanate mixed in with a resin (e.g., polyurethane). When exposed to water as an activation stimulus, the isocyanate reacts with the water to produce carbon dioxide gas. This isocyanate example may be implemented by, for example, adjusting a humidity level of the ambient environment in which the part is being printed. The humidity level can be adjusted for different layers of the part, thereby selectively causing expansion of those layers when exposed to a humidity level high enough to activate a reaction with the isocyanate in the part.
In some embodiments, the foaming agents are in the form of microspheres that are chosen to have a size and/or concentration in the resin that does not impact the viscosity for printability of the composite resin (i.e., composite resin is the resin with foaming agent, which is also referred to as an expanding foam or expandable foam in this disclosure). Microspheres may be used in concentrations in the resin in a range of, for example, 1% to 20%. In contrast, conventional 3D-printed foam parts are printed with foamed materials in an already-foamed state (foam cells at their final dimensions). For example, conventional foam materials are typically made by adding a blowing agent to a plastic material (e.g., blowing CO2 into thermoplastic polyurethane to create the cellular structures) before being used in the additive manufacturing process.
Embodiments involve 3D-printing a foam-type material that later expands to a final part geometry that can be used in a variety of industries, with footwear being a prime example. Embodiments allow the ability to print more parts on a tray when in a non-expanded form, thereby using less volume of material and increasing 3D print speed and ultimately manufacturing throughput. Embodiments also enable parts to remain unexpanded until a later time or location such as when being assembled into a final assembly or being prepared for sale to a consumer. The foam can have internal sparsity but is sealed on the shell (outer boundary) of the geometry that it forms due to the cured photoreactive polymer staying intact during expansion.
Embodiments may also advantageously use automation, robotics, computer vision, artificial intelligence, and other industrial manufacturing subsystems to mass produce parts that make use of these expanding foam materials, with the added advantage that the parts can be customized or identical to each other. Such automated flows improve the quality of each part while maintaining traceability throughout each step in the process (e.g., 3D printing stage, drying stage, spinning/post processing stage, inspection station, etc.).
Methods and systems of the present disclosure enable a price point that is comparable to or better than production costs of conventional foam products. Embodiments achieve the same physical properties as existing foam materials, but with improved manufacturing aspects of an automated 3D printing manufacturing flow such as customization, speed, high quality, and manufacturing with less labor. Embodiments also provide large upfront capital savings due to the lack of needing to invest in a tool or mold for producing the part as in conventional approaches. Application examples include footwear, toys, grips, handle grips, composite cores (e.g., a foam core that is machined then wrapped in carbon fiber), helmets, medical applications, thermal insulation, sound absorption, sound acoustics control, microphone components, mechanical absorption (e.g., cushioning) and automotive or space (e.g., dashboards, seat cushions, and other energy absorbent parts). In short, the present embodiments provide expanding foam materials that can offer improved quality compared to conventional foams, and which can be produced within an automated additive manufacturing flow thus enabling the high-volume production of parts for numerous industries.
The exterior surfaces may be configured in different ways to create a sealed outer shell around the part. In some embodiments, the exterior surfaces may be the same material as the interior foam as described in
The flowchart 60a begins with block 61 where the system receives file(s) for the part to be printed. The files can include information about the part geometry, material, and tolerances, which can then be translated into print instructions (a print recipe) for the additive manufacturing machine. For example, the print recipe can include parameters and instructions related to build geometry, illumination energy, exposure time per layer, wait time between layers, print platform position, print platform velocity, print platform acceleration, resin tub position, resin tub force, resin chemical reactivity, and resin viscosity. In some embodiments, the additive manufacturing system can be a closed loop system (e.g., see
In block 62, the part is printed. The additive manufacturing machine for printing a part in block 62 can be various types as shall be described later in this disclosure. For example, the additive manufacturing printer can be a top-down or bottom-up image projection type of system in which an image of the layer to be printed is projected onto a bottom surface of a resin tub or onto a top surface of photosensitive resin in a resin vat, and then the layer is polymerized by illuminating the resin layer. In another example, the additive manufacturing machine can be a vat-based system in which one or more materials (e.g., resin component, polymerization reactant, expansion activator, expansion inhibitor, or component to customize material properties) are dispensed (e.g., jetted) onto a liquid contained in the vat. The vat-based system may be as described in U.S. Pat. No. 11,110,650, issued on Sep. 7, 2021, and entitled “Vat-Based Additive Manufacturing with Dispensed Material,” and which is owned by the present assignee and is hereby incorporated by reference. In embodiments of using a vat-based system, layers for an expandable foam part can be printed by dispensing materials to precisely deposit ingredients/reactants of the foam material (e.g., foaming agents and/or reactants of the resin).
The printing in block 62 can involve varying the properties in different regions of the part as illustrated in
In blocks labeled “Robot” in
In embodiments, the part is printed with a closed outer shell (i.e., closed layer of the external surfaces) during the 3D printing itself. Instructions for creating the exterior shell can be incorporated into the print recipe for the 3D printer, such as printing a closed-cell expandable foam on the perimeter of the part. The closed outer layer can be the same material as throughout the part (e.g.,
In some embodiments, flow 60a optionally involves spinning in block 64 to optimize post-processing efficiency by avoiding the need to wash part(s) after printing and allowing the ability to provide exterior coatings for property customizations. The spinning can be performed according to U.S. Pat. No. 10,759,116, issued on Sep. 1, 2020, and entitled “Additive Manufactured Parts with Smooth Surface Finishes,” which is owned by the present assignee and is hereby incorporated by reference. In some embodiments, the spinning involves removing and/or distributing resin that remains on the part after printing. The spinning reduces the need for a wash step to remove the excess resin and can also create a smooth surface finish for the part prior to curing. In some embodiments, a coating material can be added to the part after printing, such as by dipping. Spinning can be used to distribute the coating, create a smooth surface finish, and/or control the thickness of the coating. In some embodiments, the coating may be used to create the exterior shell of the expandable foam part.
After the part has been printed and any further layers added (e.g., coatings to create an outer shell or to a particular surface finish), the part is cured in block 65. In some embodiments, the coating or surface finish material (if included in the part) may harden on its own, such as through natural drying or through an inherent chemical reaction. In some embodiments, curing may be achieved using application of energy involving one or more of various known methods, such as high-intensity discharge bulbs in an inert gas (e.g., argon, nitrogen, or other gases to displace oxygen) and/or any light source with or without an inert gas. In embodiments where a specific curing step occurs, the curing process can make the part more rigid and stable and harden the uncured layer of resin that remains on the part. Elements of the cloud management platform referenced above can be employed, where temperature can be monitored to optimize curing parameters, for example. In one embodiment, the oxygen level in the cure chamber can be monitored by the additive manufacturing system to ensure that the oxygen is depleted after purging (e.g., after N2 or argon or other gases heavier than oxygen are injected into the chamber to deplete oxygen). Oxygen inhibits curing, thus it is desirable to deplete oxygen from the chamber before the curing process begins.
Next in block 66 of
In one example of expanding the part in block 66 using a heat trigger, a foaming agent in the part can be activated at a certain temperature. A temperature sensor and camera (or other imaging device) can be used to measure temperature and expansion as a function of time to determine a rate of expansion. The rate of expansion can then be controlled in a number of ways such as by adjusting the heat intensity, time of heat exposure, and/or applying physical constraints to control the shape of the expanded object (e.g., expanding the part within a mold). In an example of heat adjustment, a radiant heat source can be set up to create a convection-type heat source that can be used to adjust the amount and locations of heat applied to the part. In some embodiments, the part is placed in a vacuum oven while the part is being expanded, where the vacuum pressure (i.e., low or reduced pressure, such as from 0 psi to −14.5 pounds per square inch (psi), or −5 psi to −10 psi, or approximately −7.25 psi; i.e., 0 kPa to −100 kPa, or −34.5 kPa to −70 kPa, or approximately −50 kPa) encourages the lattice/cell structures of the part to move away from each other to aid in expansion of the overall part. The various activation stimuli that trigger activation can be monitored and adjusted in real-time via the use of sensors, cameras, imaging devices, computer vision algorithms, or combinations thereof. In embodiments, the controlling of the expansion of the part involves using a stimulus to activate the expansion after the printing, and involves monitoring and adjusting the stimulus to control a rate of the expansion.
Embodiments include other ways of selectively controlling the expansion that are aided by predecessor steps in the manufacturing flow. For example, when using vat-based/dispensing systems for the printing in block 62, the concentration of the expansion ingredients (e.g., foaming agent) can be selectively dispensed in certain areas of the part to accelerate expansion during the expansion process. In other embodiments, expansion inhibitors can be dispensed in areas where little expansion is desired. Examples of expansion inhibitors include heat resistant coatings for plastics such as carbon composites, polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE), and perfluoroalkoxy (PFA). The objective of selectively controlling the expansion can similarly be achieved during the spinning in block 64 where a coating of either expansion accelerant, expansion activator or expansion inhibitor can be applied to the part. In short, the expansion process can be automated and controlled by an additive manufacturing system in a number of ways by reading and reacting to sensor data (e.g., feedback from temperature sensors, imaging devices), selective application of ingredients in predecessor steps (e.g., printing, post-process spinning), applying physical constraints (mold or physical blocking material), and/or combinations thereof. All of this can be automated in an additive manufacturing flow to achieve high volume mass production of parts, whether custom or not.
Embodiments of
In inspection block 68, an automated optical inspection or a computer vision system can be used to reject or accept parts based on visual correlation between such parts and their nominals (i.e., specifications). Inspection can be used to provide feedback for the printing in block 62 and/or the modeling in block 67.
In block 69, the finished, expanded pieces are departed from the build tray. An automated departing system can physically remove the parts from a build tray and place them into an output system (e.g., conveyor, chute, staging area, etc.) to be presented for packaging and shipping in block 70.
An example use case for the expanding foam parts of the present disclosure is gaskets. A 3D-printed geometry for a gasket can be printed with an expandable foam in a non-expanded state, then inserted into a gap space in an assembly. The foam part is later expanded to fill the gap, thus serving as a gasket. The expansion can be triggered by a variety of means (e.g., time, heat, activator, blowing agent, or various energy sources besides heat such as electrical, IR, magnetic, UV, electrostatic, ultrasonic, etc.). This delayed expansion of a gasket can be useful, for example, when working on reconditioning older part assemblies where it is helpful to have the assembly components remaining mobile or loose until repaired. Other example use cases include engine reconditioning (e.g., gaskets in engine) and medical applications.
The delayed expansion can occur during the manufacturing process, such as in
Another use case for the expanding foam pieces of the present disclosure is for safety measures, where a part could be triggered to expand to block an unwanted flow (e.g., water, gas). Fire and excessive heat safety situations are another example application, where a 3D printed non-expanded part can be triggered to expand when exposed to a certain amount of heat, thereby creating an insulator. This can buy time for time critical operations during a fire or unsafe heat related incidents. For example, in aerospace applications, the material can be designed to become a foam (expand) when exposed to heat, thereby creating a thermal barrier due to the closed-foam cells of the expanded structure. Embodiments can also be applied to general creation of insulators in the automotive, aerospace, prosthetics, and other industries.
In other embodiments, the part can be printed in block 62 of
Methods for creating additive manufactured parts from expanding foam material in accordance with the present disclosure include printing a part made of an expandable foam, using an additive manufacturing system. The expandable foam is printed in an unexpanded state and has a closed layer at an external surface of the part. Methods also include controlling expansion of the part, using the additive manufacturing system, wherein the expansion is performed after the printing. In some examples, expansion of the part may be performed without the additive manufacturing system, such as by another piece of equipment at a later time and/or at another location than when the part was manufactured.
In some embodiments, the closed layer comprises a closed-cell foam after the expansion. In some embodiments, the external surface comprises all surfaces of the part that are exposed to an ambient environment. In some embodiments, the expandable foam comprises a foaming agent in a photoreactive resin. The foaming agent may comprise particles containing a gas, where the controlling involves expanding the gas during the expansion of the part.
In some embodiments, the method further comprises dipping the part in a coating material after the printing and before the controlling the expansion, where the dipping can be used to create the closed layer. In some embodiments, methods further include spinning the part on a spinning apparatus after the printing, to coat the part with an expansion accelerant, an expansion activator or an expansion inhibitor.
In some embodiments, the printing further comprises printing a customizing material that customizes a property in the part, where the customizing material is printed in a designated region of a layer of the part. The property may be a mechanical property. The customizing material may be an activator or inhibitor for the controlling of the expansion.
In some embodiments, the controlling uses a stimulus to activate the expansion of the part after the printing, and the controlling comprises monitoring and adjusting the stimulus to control a rate of the expansion of the part. The stimulus may be at least one of a vacuum (i.e., vacuum pressure), an additive, an activator, or energy from an energy source. The energy may be heat energy, electrical energy, magnetic energy, electrostatic energy, ultrasonic energy, infrared light, or ultraviolet light.
In some embodiments, the additive manufacturing system is an automated system comprising an additive manufacturing machine, a post-processing machine (e.g., an expansion equipment for performing the expansion of the part), and sensors on the additive manufacturing machine and the post-processing machine, where the sensors provide feedback during the controlling of the expansion. In some embodiments, the methods further include modeling the expansion before the printing, where the modeling is performed by the automated additive manufacturing system. The modeling may account for non-isometric expansion to achieve desired final part dimensions.
Methods include creating additive manufactured parts from expanding foam material, the method comprising modeling expansion of a part made of an expandable foam; and printing the part made of the expandable foam according to the modeling, using an automated additive manufacturing system, where the expandable foam is printed in an unexpanded state and has a closed layer at an external surface of the part. In some examples, the closed layer comprises a closed-cell foam that remains closed after the expansion. In some examples, the external surface comprises all surfaces of the part that are exposed to an ambient environment. In some examples, the expandable foam comprises a foaming agent in a photoreactive resin, where in some cases the foaming agent comprises particles containing a gas, and the modeling comprises modeling expansion of the gas during the expansion of the part. In some examples, the modeling comprises modeling a stimulus to activate the expansion after the part is installed for use. In some examples, the methods further include applying, by the automated additive manufacturing system, a stimulus to expand the part to an expanded state, where in certain cases the stimulus is at least one of a vacuum (i.e., vacuum pressure), an additive, an activator, or energy from an energy source, and the energy comprises heat energy, electrical energy, magnetic energy, electrostatic energy, ultrasonic energy, infrared light, or ultraviolet light.
In other embodiments of
Returning to
As shall be discussed in more detail later in this disclosure, the management platform utilizes information from the sensors in conjunction with machine learning algorithms to manage the production line. In operation, the management platform of the present embodiments is in communication with all the machinery of the production line 100 (e.g., 3D printers 110a and 110b; auxiliary equipment 102, 105, 120, 130, 135 and 150; and sensors 140a-j), where the management platform controls operation of and gathers data from all the machinery. The controlling includes scheduling the equipment, providing instructions for processing the part to be made, monitoring and providing feedback on controlling expansion of foam parts (e.g., feedback from sensor 140k on expansion/auxiliary equipment 135), and providing analysis for production and for business-related decisions. The scheduling can include which printers to use and when (including printers at different geographical locations) and can take into consideration aspects such as availability of devices, service agreements with providers, shipping costs and due dates.
The production line 100 can use a management platform as shown in
The created jobs/tasks 320 are queued in a database of the management platform 300 to drive the workflow using workflow module 330. The workflow is software definable actions that can be virtually used together to create a complete manufacturing system. Machine learning module 360 may be used with the workflow module 330 to, for example, automatically optimize wait times, balance workloads and optimize content. The workflow module 330 drives iIoT devices 350 with iIoT module 340 through communication subsystem 345, which may be a LAN, a WAN, the Internet, cloud-based communications, wireless communications, or any combination thereof. The iIoT module 340 is an iIoT hub connection endpoint for the iIoT devices 350. iIoT module 340 provides basic services for functions such as application delivery, device settings, task management, logging and real-time notifications. The iIoT devices 350 can either be used individually or as a collection of devices that work together to create a complete manufacturing system. Example iIoT devices 350 include a 3D printing device, sensor device, robotics device (e.g., to move a printed part from one station to another), post-processing device (such as ultrasonic washing machines, ultrasonic knives for removing supports from the printed part, spinning devices for removing excess resin, air knives for drying parts, coordinate measuring machines for inspection, CNC machines for fine finishing, equipment for activating expansion of foam parts), processing device (computing systems for handling and managing large amounts of data associated with the print job), inspection device (e.g., measuring dimensional accuracy and/or part quality of foam parts during and/or after expansion), and notification device. Notification devices may include, for example, light towers, human machine interfaces, audible buzzers, display monitors to display a status, and other devices and/or programs that provide status indications or communications by visual and/or audible means (e.g., lights, displays, emails, texts).
Embodiments include one or more of the workflow module 330, iIoT module 340, and/or communication subsystem 345 controlling (e.g., in an automated fashion) expansion of the printed part, such as through wireless or other electronic communication. For example, the management platform 300 can instruct an expansion equipment (e.g., auxiliary equipment 135 of
Data 370 is gathered from sensors in the iIoT devices 350, e.g., through iIoT module 340. The data 370 can include, for example, performance data, process data and device status. Process data can include information from sensors of the iIoT devices as well as other manufacturing data, such as the number of parts produced, accuracy of foam part expansion compared to modeled predictions, and downtime due to equipment maintenance. Because process data coming back from the iIoT devices 350 can result in large amounts of data, the data may flow into a data lake, repository or database and be kept as needed based on each job/task use case. As one example, parts manufactured for medical or aerospace applications may require the data to be kept for years, while less critical cases may not require any data to be kept once the part has been completed.
Machine learning module 360 analyzes information from jobs/tasks 320, workflow module 330, iIoT module 340 and data 370 to provide instructions to the workflow module 330 and to control operation of the iIoT devices 350 and in particular, to automatically control additive manufacturing machines in the production line. Controlling operation can include changing machine parameters for a manufacturing run, modifying expansion stimuli parameters, and/or scheduling of the equipment in the workflow. The machine learning module 360 uses AI to process and analyze the device data to perform various tasks, such as to detect manufacturing quality issues, predict hardware failures, and provide process traceability. For example, errors that are detected or predicted during a print run by machine learning module 360 can result in the iIoT module 340 instructing a 3D printer to abort a job, thus reducing material waste and unproductive manufacturing time. In another example, trends in part quality deviation that are measured by post-processing devices (e.g., an inspection station) can be recognized by the machine learning module 360 and corrective action can then be formulated for future 3D print jobs. In some embodiments, the AI may process the feedback in conjunction with a historical database of prior feedback, to learn from past production runs.
The illumination system 810 projects a first image through the membrane 835 into the resin pool 820 that is confined within the resin tub 830. The build area 860 is an area in the resin pool 820 where the resin is exposed (e.g., to ultraviolet light from the illumination system 810) and crosslinks to form a first solid polymer layer on the print platform 840. Some non-limiting examples of resin materials include acrylates, epoxies, methacrylates, urethanes, silicones, vinyls, combinations thereof, or other photoreactive resins that crosslink upon exposure to illumination. The resin may include foaming agents to create expandable foam parts as described herein. In some embodiments, the resin has a relatively short curing time compared to photosensitive resins with average curing times. In other embodiments, the resin is photosensitive to wavelengths of illumination from about 200 nm to about 500 nm, or to wavelengths outside of that range (e.g., greater than 500 nm, or from 500 nm to 1000 nm). In other embodiments, the resin forms a solid with properties after curing that are desirable for the specific object being fabricated, such as desirable mechanical properties (e.g., high fracture strength), desirable optical properties (e.g., high optical transmission in visible wavelengths), or desirable chemical properties (e.g., stable when exposed to moisture). After exposure of the first layer, the print platform 840 moves upwards (i.e., in the positive z-direction), and a second layer can be formed by exposing a second pattern projected from the illumination system 810. This “bottom up” process can then be repeated until the entire object is printed, and the finished object is then lifted out of the resin pool 820.
In some embodiments, the illumination system 810 emits radiant energy (i.e., illumination) over a range of different wavelengths, for example, from 200 nm to 500 nm, or from 500 nm to 1000 nm, or over other wavelength ranges. The illumination system 810 can use any illumination source that is capable of projecting an image (i.e., pattern) for printing the 3D part. Some non-limiting examples of illumination sources are arrays of light emitting diodes, liquid crystal-based projection systems, liquid crystal displays (LCDs), liquid crystal on silicon (LCOS) displays, mercury vapor lamp-based projection systems, digital light processing (DLP) projectors, discrete lasers, and laser projection systems.
In other embodiments, PRPSs can be inverted with respect to the system shown in
The PRPS 800 (i.e., additive manufacturing machine) is equipped with one or more sensors that monitor various parameters before, during, and after a print run. The information from the sensors can then be used to alter the printing process during the print run or for future print runs. Closed loop operation, as described by the systems and methods herein, can be beneficial for a variety of reasons, including improved print quality (e.g., printed object structural integrity, foam expansion of the part and object surface roughness), print run duration, and equipment longevity. Manufacturing efficiency and cost effectiveness of the system, as well as system maintenance and serviceability, can also be improved using the systems and methods described herein.
In some embodiments, two or more sensors are integrated in a closed loop feedback system in a production line involving a PRPS, to provide information to adjust parameters of a print run in situ. The relationships between different input parameters (e.g., illumination energy, membrane tension, and print platform movement) and output parameters (e.g., local resin temperature, and force experienced by the print platform during movement) in conjunction with sensor information from auxiliary equipment on the production line are complex, and in many cases not obvious. For example, information from two or more of the following sensors can be used together: z-stage position, direction, and velocity, resin bulk temperature, resin tub down force, resin tub vertical displacement, and elevator arm load sensor. Using the systems and methods described herein, complex interactions between multiple parameters can be measured and accounted for during a print run or in future print runs, resulting in higher quality printed objects.
In some embodiments, a print recipe is used by the PRPS. The print recipe contains information for each layer in a 3D printed part to be built by the PRPS. The job for the part contains the content, print recipe and workflow to apply, and the print recipe is created in the workflow from the 3D content input by a user or API. The print recipe can contain instructions for the PRPS before, during and after a print run. For example, the print recipe can include parameters and instructions related to build geometry, illumination energy, exposure time per layer, wait time between layers, print platform position, print platform velocity, print platform acceleration, resin tub position, resin tub force, resin chemical reactivity, resin viscosity, and selective printing (within a layer or layer to layer) of customizing materials for mechanical properties and/or foam expansion. In conventional systems, the print recipe is pre-determined before a print run and is static and does not change during the print run. In the embodiments described herein, the print recipe can be updated before, during and/or after the print run. For example, the parameters and/or instructions contained within the print recipe can be updated before, during and/or after the print run based on input from one or more sensors in the additive manufacturing production line. In some embodiments, the print recipe can be updated before, during and/or after the printing of a given layer within the printed object.
In some embodiments the PRPS can include a resin tub (830,
Conventional photoreactive resins are made of monomer, oligomer, photoinitiator, and other materials, where a key ingredient that makes the resin polymerize and sensitive to light is the photoinitiator. In some embodiments of
In the embodiment of
The resin material and dispensed photoinitiator are then exposed to a wavelength of light from an illumination source 1130, which causes polymerization in selective areas constrained to where the photoinitiator is present. The polymerized layer adheres to the build platform 1160 as in known vat-based processes. The illumination source 1130 may be a UV light source or any other source that produces curing wavelengths that are reactive with the photoinitiator and base resin. For example, in some embodiments, the resin may be photosensitive to wavelengths of illumination from about 200 nm to about 500 nm, or to wavelengths outside of that range (e.g., greater than 500 nm, or from 500 nm to 1000 nm). In the embodiment shown in
Other embodiments of
Embodiments of manufacturing expanding foam pieces may use vat-based additive manufacturing techniques in which certain materials are selectively dispensed onto the top surface of a liquid substance in the vat. The vat is a tank or tub that is used to hold liquid. Embodiments provide on-demand delivery systems for dispensing materials such that reactants/components come into contact with each other in the vat to form additive manufactured parts. In some embodiments, a substance is dispensed on the surface of a photopolymerizable content that is in the vat, selectively promoting polymerization only in the areas where the substance is delivered. The dispensed substance may be a reaction activator such as a photoinitiator solution that is precisely added into the vat material, where the vat material does not include a photoinitiator. After being dispensed in the vat, the photoinitiator absorbs a polymerization actuation energy such as ultraviolet (UV) light, such that the material is cured only where the photoinitiator is present. In some embodiments, a first reactant of a chemical reaction can be used as the vat material and a second part that will react with the first part for polymerization (e.g., in the presence of UV light) can be dispensed. In some embodiments, foaming agents, foam expansion accelerants or foam expansion inhibitors can be included in the vat material or dispensed onto the vat material.
Reference has been made in detail to embodiments of the disclosed invention, one or more examples of which have been illustrated in the accompanying figures. Each example has been provided by way of explanation of the present technology, not as a limitation of the present technology. In fact, while the specification has been described in detail with respect to specific embodiments of the invention, it will be appreciated that those skilled in the art, upon attaining an understanding of the foregoing, may readily conceive of alterations to, variations of, and equivalents to these embodiments. For instance, features illustrated or described as part of one embodiment may be used with another embodiment to yield a still further embodiment. Thus, it is intended that the present subject matter covers all such modifications and variations within the scope of the appended claims and their equivalents. These and other modifications and variations to the present invention may be practiced by those of ordinary skill in the art, without departing from the scope of the present invention, which is more particularly set forth in the appended claims. Furthermore, those of ordinary skill in the art will appreciate that the foregoing description is by way of example only, and is not intended to limit the invention.
This application claims priority to U.S. Provisional Application No. 63/261,135, filed on Sep. 13, 2021, and entitled “Expanding Foams in Additive Manufacturing”; the contents of which are hereby incorporated by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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63261135 | Sep 2021 | US |