TOWARD RAPID PROCESS QUALIFICATION OF LASER POWDER BED FUSION: MODEL PREDICTIVE CONTROL OF PART THERMAL HISTORY

被引:0
作者
Riensche, Alexander [1 ]
Bevans, Benjamin [1 ]
Sions, John [2 ]
Snyder, Kyle [2 ]
Plotnikov, Yuri [2 ]
Hass, Derek [2 ]
Rao, Prahalada [1 ]
机构
[1] Virginia Tech, Blacksburg, VA 24061 USA
[2] CCAM, Disputanta, VA USA
来源
PROCEEDINGS OF ASME 2024 19TH INTERNATIONAL MANUFACTURING SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING CONFERENCE, MSEC2024, VOL 1 | 2024年
基金
美国国家科学基金会;
关键词
Laser Powder Bed Fusion; Process Control; Thermal Modeling; Support Elimination;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
T [工业技术];
学科分类号
08 ;
摘要
This work pertains to the laser powder bed fusion (LPBF) additive manufacturing process. The goal of this work is to mitigate the expense and time required for qualification of laser powder bed fusion processed parts. In pursuit of this goal, the objective of this work is to develop and apply a physics-based model predictive control strategy to modulate the thermal history before the part is built. The key idea is to determine a desired thermal history for a given part a priori to printing using a physics-based model. Subsequently, a model predictive control strategy is developed to attain the desired thermal history by changing the laser power layer-by-layer. This is an important area of research because the spatiotemporal distribution of temperature within the part (also known as the thermal history) influences flaw formation, microstructure evolution, and surface/geometric integrity, all of which ultimately determine the mechanical properties of the part. Currently, laser powder bed fusion parts are qualified using a build-and-test approach wherein parameters are optimized by printing simple test coupons, followed by examining their properties via materials characterization and testing - a cumbersome and expensive process that often takes years. These parameters, once optimized, are maintained constant throughout the process for a part. However, thermal history is a function of over 50 processing parameters including material properties and part design, consequently, the current approach of parameter optimization based on empirical testing of simple test coupons seldom transfers successfully to complex, practical parts. Rather than instinctive process parameter optimization, the model predictive control strategy presents a radically different approach to LPBF part qualification that is based on understanding and modulating the causal thermal physics of the process. The approach has three steps: (Step 1) Predict - given a part geometry, use a rapid, mesh-less physics-based simulation model to predict its thermal history, analyze the predicted thermal history trend, isolate potential red flag problems such as heat buildup, and set a desired thermal history that corrects deleterious trends. (Step 2) Parse - iteratively simulate the thermal history as a function of various laser power levels layer-by-layer over a fixed time horizon. (Step 3) Select - the laser power that provides the closest match to the desired thermal history. Repeat Steps 2 and 3 until the part is completely built. We demonstrate through experiments with various geometries two advantages of this model predictive control strategy when applied to laser powder bed fusion: (i) prevent part failures due to overheating and distortion, while mitigating the need for anchoring supports; and (ii) improve surface integrity of hard to access internal surfaces.
引用
收藏
页数:7
相关论文
共 50 条
[11]   Predictive process mapping for laser powder bed fusion: A review of existing analytical solutions [J].
Agrawal, Ankur K. ;
Rankouhi, Behzad ;
Thoma, Dan J. .
CURRENT OPINION IN SOLID STATE & MATERIALS SCIENCE, 2022, 26 (06)
[12]   Powder spreading in laser-powder bed fusion process [J].
M. Hossein Sehhat ;
Ali Mahdianikhotbesara .
Granular Matter, 2021, 23
[13]   Powder spreading in laser-powder bed fusion process [J].
Sehhat, M. Hossein ;
Mahdianikhotbesara, Ali .
GRANULAR MATTER, 2021, 23 (04)
[14]   Dimensionless Enthalpy as Characteristic Factor for Process Control in Laser Powder Bed Fusion [J].
Hanemann, Theresa ;
Seyfert, Christoph ;
Holfelder, Peter ;
Rota, Astrid ;
Heilmaier, Martin .
JOURNAL OF LASER MICRO NANOENGINEERING, 2020, 15 (03) :257-266
[15]   A discrete source model of powder bed fusion additive manufacturing thermal history [J].
Schwalbach, Edwin J. ;
Donegan, Sean P. ;
Chapman, Michael G. ;
Chaput, Kevin J. ;
Groeber, Michael A. .
ADDITIVE MANUFACTURING, 2019, 25 :485-498
[16]   BRIEF PAPER: DECIPHERING THE EFFECT OF PART THERMAL HISTORY ON MICROSTRUCTURE AND MECHANICAL PROPERTIES IN LASER POWDER BED FUSION OF SS316L [J].
Deshmukh, Kaustubh ;
Christopher, B. ;
Riensche, Alex ;
Mirzaeifar, Reza ;
Lane, Ryan J. ;
Rao, Prahalada ;
Snyder, Kyle .
PROCEEDINGS OF ASME 2024 19TH INTERNATIONAL MANUFACTURING SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING CONFERENCE, MSEC2024, VOL 1, 2024,
[17]   A novel framework using FEM and machine learning models with experimental verification for Inconel-718 rapid part qualification by laser powder bed fusion [J].
Muhammad Arif Mahmood ;
Usman Tariq .
The International Journal of Advanced Manufacturing Technology, 2023, 129 :1567-1584
[18]   A novel framework using FEM and machine learning models with experimental verification for Inconel-718 rapid part qualification by laser powder bed fusion [J].
Mahmood, Muhammad Arif ;
Tariq, Usman .
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ADVANCED MANUFACTURING TECHNOLOGY, 2023, 129 (3-4) :1567-1584
[19]   An Efficient Track-Scale Model for Laser Powder Bed Fusion Additive Manufacturing: Part 1-Thermal Model [J].
Tangestani, Reza ;
Sabiston, Trevor ;
Chakraborty, Apratim ;
Muhammad, Waqas ;
Yuan, Lang ;
Martin, Etienne .
FRONTIERS IN MATERIALS, 2021, 8
[20]   Estimation of part-to-powder heat losses as surface convection in laser powder bed fusion [J].
Li, Chao ;
Gouge, Michael F. ;
Denlinger, Erik R. ;
Irwin, Jeff E. ;
Michaleris, Pan .
ADDITIVE MANUFACTURING, 2019, 26 :258-269