This invention relates to the field of additive manufacturing of an object, also called 3D printing, by stacking successive layers of powder.
The invention relates particularly to the problem of powder dissemination while it is being manipulated.
In the field of additive manufacturing of an object by stacking successive layers of powder, a first step is usually to load the powder in a special-purpose loading area in the machine used. The risk of powder dissemination is high while powder is manipulated during this loading operation. Such a risk also exists during the final step to unload the manufactured object, surrounded by unbonded powder. There are several disadvantages with such powder dissemination.
Firstly, powder particles emitted into the atmosphere cause a loss of material, that can be expensive. Secondly, this loss can cause an unwanted change in the composition. For example, this is the case when the manipulated powder is composed of a mix of different natures of powder, in which case the stoichemistry can be changed.
Powder dissemination can also be the cause of increased equipment maintenance. These powders deposited in the work environment can carry material that will foul the equipment. Consequently, specific maintenance actions can become necessary as a result of uncontrolled dissemination.
Finally, dissemination of powder can introduce risks for the health and safety of operators. For example, inhalation or skin contact with a powder deemed to be dangerous can have effects on health, causing irritations, allergies, disorders of the nervous system and even cancers. Even powders considered to be inert, in other words with no specific toxicity, can overload the lungs if they are present in large quantities, possibly associated with pulmonary fibrosis.
Several solutions such as dust collection installations have been disclosed in prior art to enable secure manipulation with regard to problems with dissemination or dusting of the powder. However, these solutions can be improved and are not necessarily suitable for the field of additive manufacturing by stacking successive layers of powder.
The first purpose of the invention to at least partly overcome the disadvantages of embodiments according to prior art, is an additive manufacturing method for an object using at least one powder, comprising the following steps in succession:
manufacture a solid block starting from said powder and a sublimatable material;
load the solid block in a loading space of an additive manufacturing machine;
sublimate said material present in the solid block and recover said powder; and
additive manufacturing of the object by stacking successive layers made using the powder recovered in the previous step.
The invention has the advantage that the powder is loaded in the form of a block made solid by the presence of the sublimatable material. The solid nature of the block containing the powder prevents dissemination of the powder at the time of loading into the additive manufacturing machine, which advantageously reduces material losses, unwanted variations in the composition of the powder loaded into this machine, equipment safety needs and health and safety risks.
The invention preferably has at least one of the following additional characteristics, taken in isolation or in combination.
The method comprises a step after the additive manufacturing step of the object, to partially or entirely coat an assembly composed of the unbonded powder and the object surrounded by this powder, the coating being made by a sublimatable material, preferably using all or some of said material recovered during said sublimation step. This specific feature can help to reduce risks of powder dissemination when the assembly containing the object is unloaded. In this respect, note that another source of sublimatable material could be used for the coating, without going outside the framework of the invention.
In order to make the coating, said material is applied around said assembly in the liquid state so as to impregnate said powder by capillarity, the application being made by direct application or by sprinkling, or said material is applied around said assembly by means of a spray, in other words a mechanical device capable of vaporising a liquid into fine droplets, this device also being known as an aerosol.
After the coating step, the coated assembly is extracted from the additive manufacturing machine and is transferred to another work station for extraction of said object, for example in a glove box inside which dissemination of the powder can easily be contained.
After said sublimation step, a step is carried out to recover said sublimated material using a cold trap. This recovery is done for reuse of the material for coating purposes as mentioned above, and/or for manufacturing new solid blocks that will be loaded into an additive manufacturing machine.
Said sublimatable material is preferably cyclododecane.
According to a first embodiment, said step to manufacture the solid block from said powder and said sublimatable material takes place as follows:
mix said powder and material so as to obtain a non-powdery material;
compact the mix at ambient temperature;
melt said material on the external surface of the compacted mix, so as to obtain a solid external wall with a given thickness after cooling, said external wall of the solid block defining an internal cavity in which the remainder of the mix of said powder and said material are located.
According to a second embodiment, said step to manufacture the solid block from said powder and said sublimatable material takes place as follows:
make a container using said material, said container comprising a body defining an internal cavity and en element to close said internal cavity;
introduce the powder into the internal cavity;
close the internal cavity using said closing element.
According to a third embodiment, said step to manufacture the solid block from said powder and said sublimatable material takes place as follows:
bring said material in liquid form into a mould and then pour the powder into the mould containing the material in liquid form, or vice versa;
cool the material so as to obtain a solid block of material containing the powder.
According to a fourth embodiment, said step to manufacture the solid block from said powder and said sublimatable material takes place as follows:
place the powder in a mould;
impregnate the powder around the periphery, using a material in liquid form to a given thickness, so as to obtain a solid external wall after cooling over said given thickness, said external wall of the solid block defining an internal cavity in which the remainder of said powder is located.
Furthermore, said additive manufacturing step of the object is done using one of the following techniques:
Selective Laser Melting (SLM) or Electron Beam Melting (EBM);
Selective Laser Sintering (SLS) or selective electron beam sintering;
any other type of powder solidification technique under the action of a medium to high power energy source, the principle being to melt or sinter a powder bed by laser beam or electron beam, or
projection of a binder on successive layers of powder.
Preferably, said powder is chosen from among:
metallic powders, for example titanium alloy, aluminium alloy, nickel alloy, superalloy, steel, stainless steel, refractory metal, precious metals, pure metals or in alloyed metals;
organic powders, for example polyamide, polyether block amide, polystyrene, polyetheretherketone (PEEK), polyaryletherketone (PAEK), polyamide containing aluminium;
inorganic powders, for example quartz, ceramic, calcium sulphate.
Obviously, mixes of these powders are possible without going outside the framework of the invention. The same applies for sublimatable materials that can also be mixed as will be mentioned below.
Another purpose of the invention is an additive manufacturing machine for implementation of the method described above, the machine comprising:
said loading space for the solid block containing the powder and the sublimatable material;
means of sublimating said material present in the solid block;
an additive manufacturing module; and
means of recovering the powder recovered after sublimation of said material, and routing it to said module.
Preferably, the machine comprises means of recovering said sublimated material, said means including said cold trap.
Preferably, the machine comprises means of coating the assembly composed of unbonded powder and the object surrounded by this powder.
Other advantages and characteristics of the invention will become clear after reading the following detailed non-limitative description.
This description will be made with reference to the appended drawings among which;
Firstly with reference to
The machine 1 is fitted with an external cover 2, made in a single piece or using several cladding elements added onto each other. These cladding elements 2 also comprise conventional doors (not shown) for loading the powder and for loading the object after manufacturing.
On
The machine 1 comprises firstly a loading space 4 capable of containing one or several solid blocks 6, with a shape complementary to the shape of the loading space 4. As a minimum, the solid block 6 must be able to enter the loading space 4.
Each solid block 6 may be solid or hollow. It contains powder P1 that will be used for additive manufacturing of an object, and a sublimatable material P2 in sold form.
The nature of the powder P1 is determined as a function of the required composition for the object to be manufactured by 3D printing. As non-limitative examples, one of the following powders or a mix of at least two of these powders can be used:
metallic powders, for example titanium alloy, aluminium alloy, nickel alloy, superalloy, steel, stainless steel, refractory metal, precious metals or pure materials (Fe, Cu, Al, etc.);
organic powders, for example polyamide, polyether block amide, polystyrene, polyetheretherketone (PEEK), polyaryletherketone (PAEK), polyamide containing aluminium;
inorganic powders, for example quartz, ceramic, calcium sulphate, glass.
Cyclododecane (C12H24) is preferably chosen as the sublimatable material P2. Although obviously other materials can be envisaged, cyclododecane is the best choice for the invention due to its physical characteristics including:
at ambient temperature (20° C.+/−5° C.), it is in the form of a white to translucid solid;
melting temperature: between 58° C. and 60° C.;
vapour pressure: 0.1 hPa at 20° C.;
sublimation enthalpy: 63.017-76.400 kJ mol−1 25° C.;
In particular, cyclododecane has the following advantages:
vaporisation without the addition of solvent, due to its ability to sublimate;
it may be in the form of a powder with large size grading, more than 10 μm;
it can be easily moulded to obtain a particular form;
it can be applied by spray, by liquid drops, or by direct dispensation;
it acts like a consolidant, binder and coating;
its sublimation rate and dynamics depend on several factors such as the temperature, pressure, density, structure of the material, thickness, surface condition, chemical composition (in this example, fixed at C12H24), the porosity, free volume, etc.;
it has factors that sharply accelerate its sublimation, such as a temperature rise for example to 50° C., or strong ventilation and/or creation of a vacuum;
it has factors that sharply decelerate its sublimation, such as freezing to between −15 and −20° C., saturation of the surrounding medium, cooling to between 5 and 10° C.;
after sublimation, it is possible and easy to condense the material in a cold trap;
it does not generate any surface pollution after sublimation.
All these advantages make this material perfectly adapted to implementation of the invention, particularly for manufacturing solid blocks 6, some examples of which will be described below with reference to
Moreover, the additive manufacturing machine comprises means 8 of sublimation of said material present in the solid block 6. Example embodiments of these means 8 will be described with reference to
The machine 1 also comprises an additive manufacturing module 10 with a classical design, some examples of which will be described below with reference to
The machine 1 also comprises means 13 of recovering the sublimated material, these means comprising a cold trap so as to recover this material P2 in solid form.
Finally, the machine 1 comprises means 14 for coating an assembly 16 containing the unbonded powder P1 and the object obtained 20, surrounded by this powder, and possible a tray or support on which the object is built. An example embodiment of these means 14 will be described below with reference to
Now with reference to
The method begins with a step E1, to manufacture a solid block 6. In this respect, a single solid block 6 is manufactured preferably with a shape complementary to the shape of the machine loading space 4. Nevertheless, several blocks 6 could be manufactured that, when superposed in the loading space 4, would have an assembled shape complementary to the shape of this space. This latter solution has an advantage, particularly when the composition of the required object can change, because it then becomes easy to manufacture blocks 6 using different powders before stacking these blocks in the machine loading space.
There are several possibilities for manufacturing solid blocks 6. Four example embodiments will now be described. However, it should be noted that these examples can possibly be combined, in that the steps described with reference to some examples may be applied to other examples, and vice versa.
Firstly, a first example of manufacturing of a solid block 6 is shown with reference to
The first step shown diagrammatically on
Once the mix has been obtained, the mix is compacted at ambient temperature as shown diagrammatically on
As shown diagrammatically on
Solidification of the external wall 32 results in the solid block 6 being obtained, that is therefore hollow with its wall 32 performing the function of a shell with controlled thickness defining an internal cavity 34 inside which the remaining mix of powders P1 and P2 is contained.
In this manufacturing example, note that the external shell wall 32 can be composed exclusively of material P2, or it can be a mix of powders P1 and P2.
A second example of manufacturing a solid block 6 is shown with reference to
Manufacturing begins by manufacturing a container 36 using a material P2 in the form of a compacted powder. This container 36 comprises a body 36a defining an internal cavity 34, and a closing element 36b of the internal cavity, this element 36b being in the form of a plug. The two unassembled parts 36a, 36b of the container are shown in
This example manufacturing process is efficient because the part of the container 36 that will subsequently be sublimated is entirely around its periphery. The sublimation step can thus be done more quickly.
In one alternative embodiment, elements 36a, 36b making up the solid container may be made from a mix of the two powders P1, P2.
A third example of manufacturing a solid block 6 is shown with reference to
Manufacturing is begun by bringing the material P2 in liquid form into a receptacle 30 forming a mould. The powder P1 is then poured into this receptacle, that is impregnated by the liquid phase of material P2, by capillarity. Conversely, the powder P1 can be added into the receptacle 30 before the material P2. The two phases are then mixed to obtain a homogeneous assembly.
The material P2 is then cooled so as to obtain the solid block 6 based on material P2 containing powder P1. The block 6 obtained has an external shape making it suitable to be housed directly in the loading space of the additive manufacturing machine.
With this third example embodiment, the powder P1 is perfectly bonded by the material P2. Risks of dissemination of powder P1 are thus very much reduced, even if the solid block 6 should break.
A peripheral wall made of material P2 can be placed around the assembly obtained in
A fourth example of manufacturing a solid block 6 is shown with reference to
Manufacturing begins by putting powder P1 into place at ambient temperature in a receptacle 30 forming a mould, as shown diagrammatically on
Impregnation is done such that after the peripheral zone in which material P2 is melted has cooled, a solid external wall 32 extends over the given thickness “Ep” identified on
Considering
The sublimation is conventionally done using the above-mentioned means 8, of which a first example embodiment is shown on
According to a second embodiment shown on
Regardless of the selected sublimation technique, the powder P1 is released and recovered by means 12 as the material P2 in the block 6 sublimates. Preferably, it is restored to its powder nature, which is conducive to obtaining a quality object 20. Its restored fluidity (also called “flowability”) makes it easy for it to be routed to the additive manufacturing module 10 within which an additive manufacturing step E4 of the object 20 is performed.
Note that separation of elements P1 and P2 obtained by melting or sintering additive manufacturing methods can be complete or only partial. It is quite possible that a small proportion of material P2 (in this case cyclododecane) can remain associated with powder P1 after the separation step. This will be eliminated later by the temperature rise related to the subsequent melting or sintering step. Therefore, under these conditions, the only criterion during separation of powders P1 and P2 is that the necessary and sufficient physical parameters (particularly flowability) of powder P1 are restored so that a layer of it can be formed.
Conventional aspects of additive manufacturing E4 will only be described very briefly. According to a first example embodiment of module 10 shown on
The module comprises a spray head 68 for the binder 60, and a scraper system 70 for placement of the next layer. Finally, it comprises a tray 72 that supports the entire manufacturing chamber. The manufacturing chamber is supplied by loading the recovered powder P1 into the reservoir 64, in a known manner. After manufacturing has started, the scraper 70 performs left to right sweeping movements in order to collect a volume of powder in the reservoir 64 and then to spread it in a powder bed a few tens of micrometers thick, in the part manufacturing tank. Therefore the support tray 72 starts in the “high” position and for each new layer 62, its position is lowered by an increment so that the scraper can pass and another bed of powder can be formed. For each powder bed thus formed, a part is solidified by addition of the binder 60. The object 20 is manufactured layer by layer, and will finally be surrounded by unbonded powder P1.
The second example embodiment illustrated on
The next step in the method shown diagrammatically on
The support tray 72 is moved upwards so that the assembly 16 projects out of the manufacturing tank, to coat the assembly 16 in an operation also called partial or total encapsulation. As shown diagrammatically on
In the example on
After the coated assembly 16 has been extracted from the machine 1, the manufacturing method is completed by step E6 to extract the object 20. This step E6 is implemented after the coated assembly 16 has been placed on another workstation, preferably in a glovebox (not shown). The first operation during this step E6 is to remove the coating 90, that can then be recovered to manufacture a new solid block 6. At this stage, the object 20 is surrounded by unbonded powder P1. Therefore this step consists of removing the unbonded powder by suction or dusting and then recovering the support tray 72 on which the object has been progressively built, when the tray has been moved with the coated assembly 16 in the glovebox.
Obviously, an expert in the subject can make various modifications to the invention as it has just been described through non-limitative examples.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
15 57202 | Jul 2015 | FR | national |