Electrostatic polymer aerosol deposition and fusing of solid particles for three-dimensional printing

11413813 · 2022-08-16

Assignee

Inventors

Cpc classification

International classification

Abstract

An additive manufacturing process includes creating an aerosol from a powder at a spray generator, charging the aerosol to produce a charged aerosol having a first charge, forming a blanket charge on a deposition surface having a second charge with an opposite polarity from the first charge, selectively removing regions of the blanket charge, leaving charged regions on the deposition surface, and transporting the charged aerosol to the charged regions to form structures on the charged regions from the charged aerosol.

Claims

1. An additive manufacturing process, comprising: creating an aerosol from a dry powder at a spray generator using a first flow of gas; charging the aerosol to produce a charged aerosol having a first charge; forming a blanket charge on a deposition surface having a second charge with an opposite polarity from the first charge; selectively removing regions of the blanket charge from the deposition surface, leaving charged regions on the deposition surface; and using one of either a second flow of gas or a vacuum to transporting the charged aerosol to the charged regions to form structures on the charged regions from the charged aerosol; and dispensing the aerosol onto the deposition surface such that the aerosol forms a part being manufactured on the charged regions of the deposition surface from layers of the aerosol.

2. The process of claim 1, further comprising applying energy to fuse the structures.

3. The process of claim 1, further comprising applying a support material to fill in gaps between the structures.

4. The process of claim 1, wherein forming the blanket charge on the deposition surface comprises forming the charge using a corotron.

5. The process of claim 1, wherein selectively removing regions of the blanket charge comprises using an ionographic print head.

6. The process of claim 1, wherein transporting the charged aerosol comprises transporting the charged aerosol through tubing between the spray generator and the deposition surface.

7. The process of claim 1, wherein the powder comprises a thermoplastic.

8. The process of claim 7, further comprising curing the thermoplastic.

9. The process of claim 8, wherein curing comprises one of a heat source, hot air, and a heated roller.

10. The process of claim 1, wherein charging the aerosol comprises applying a charge to the opposite of the blanket charge during transporting.

11. The process of claim 1, wherein transporting the charged aerosol comprises applying one of either a second flow of gas or a vacuum.

12. The process of claim 1, wherein transporting the charged aerosol further comprises receiving the charged aerosol powder and dispensing the charged aerosol powder on the deposition surface.

13. The process of claim 1, further comprising moving the deposition surface during the transporting to direct the charged aerosol to regions on the deposition surface.

Description

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

(1) FIG. 1 shows an embodiment of a three-dimensional additive manufacturing system.

(2) FIG. 2 shows another view of a three-dimensional additive manufacturing system.

(3) FIG. 3 shows an embodiment of a return and recycling path.

(4) FIG. 4 shows an embodiment of a three-dimensional additive manufacturing system with a support material.

(5) FIG. 5 shows an embodiment of a method of three-dimensional additive manufacturing.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE EMBODIMENTS

(6) The embodiments here provide the benefits of three-dimensional, digital, additive manufacturing techniques with a broader range of thermoplastic materials than would otherwise be attainable. They result in feature size resolution of the produced objects similar in complexity and structural integrity to more traditional manufacturing techniques, such as injection molding processes. The systems and methods here can aerosolize and create three-dimensional objects out of high molecular weight polymers powders and other thermoplastics, such as nylon, polystyrene, polycarbonate, polypropylene, polysulfone, and acetal. The use of powders may alleviate some of the manufacturing restraints on temperature and atmospheres that affect fluids.

(7) FIG. 1 shows a block diagram of an example polymer deposition system 100 that includes an aerosol generator 102, a transport system 104, a multi-nozzle array 106, and an object production stage 108. The aerosol generator 102 receives powder from a powder source 110 and. The aerosol of the powder can be formed in many different methods well known in the art, such as those disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 2,862,646, or found at www.tsi.com/small-scale-powder-disperser-3443. In one embodiment, a stream of high velocity gas is blown into a container partially filled with power. The airflow entrains the particles and the chaotic nature of the flow mixes the air and powder such that it creates an aerosol. This aerosol can be removed from the container with another flow or a vacuum.

(8) A transport system 104 then transports the aerosolized powder from the aerosol generator 102 to a multi-nozzle array 106 that dispenses the powder onto a surface in the object production stage. The transport system 104 includes a charge element 116 that charges the spray with a charge of a first polarity. As will be discussed in more detail later, the deposition surface will have regions with an opposite charge to attract the aerosolized powder particles to those regions. The charged aerosol is then applied to the surface using the multi-nozzle array to the deposition surface. Any ‘waste’ or leftover material may be recycled by the material recycler 120.

(9) FIG. 2 shows an alternative view of an additive manufacturing system 200. The aerosol generator 206 aerosolizes a powder shown as particles 204. The transport system 208, possibly consisting of an air stream 202, transports the aerosolized powder from the aerosol generator 206 to the deposition surface 214. In one embodiment, the transport system may include tubing, with insulation as needed, a sheath flow of air, and possible filtration. In addition, the transport stream may include an inertial impactor to allow size selection, as well as filters as needed.

(10) Charge element 210 applies a charge of a first polarity to the aerosol. This may involve a set of electrodes on either side of the transport system to generate an electric field through which the aerosol passes. The deposition surface 214 will receive the charged particles such as 216. In one embodiment, the deposition surface resides on a stage 218 that may be a three-axis (x, y, and z) stage that moves relative to the deposition nozzle array.

(11) Prior to the charged particles reaching the deposition surface selective regions of the deposition surface received an opposite charge. In one embodiment, a first charging device such as a corotron 220 (a corona charging device) applies a blanket charge to the deposition surface, the charge being of a opposite polarity to the first polarity. While FIG. 2 shows the charging device 220, it will only be present prior to the arrival of the powder spray.

(12) After the blanket charge formed on the deposition surface, another charging device, such as an ionographic print head, neutralizes the charge from the non-part portions of the surface. The particles will be attracted to the portions of the deposition surface that still have the opposite charge.

(13) Once the particles from the powder spray reach the deposition surface and ‘stick’ to the oppositely charged regions, the parts or other structures will begin to form. During or after formation of the parts, the powder material may undergo heating to fuse the material into the parts. Fusing can be achieved through the application of heat and/or pressure. Heat can be applied through the use of an infrared source, a heated roller, or the use of high temperature air. Other embodiments may involve application of ultraviolet light to cure powder formations made from UV-curable powders. In addition, the powder aerosol may also be pressurized to assist with the fusing.

(14) As the powder material collects in the selected regions of the deposition surface, portions of the powder spray will fall off the deposition surface. In some embodiments, the powder material that does not stick could be recycled back to the aerosol generator 206. The material recycling will typically occur away from the heat or other energy used to fuse the parts forming at the charged regions of the deposition surface. FIG. 3 shows an example of the recycling path 120 from FIG. 1. The powder material flows past the deposition surface 214 and some of the particles 216 are attracted to the regions of the deposition surface 214.

(15) As shown in FIG. 4, once the powder material is fused to form the parts such as 300, an optional support material 302 may fill in the gaps such as 308 to create a smooth flat surface. The material could reach the gaps from a nozzle 304 and a doctor blade 306 or other implement would smooth it in to the gaps to provide more structurally robust parts.

(16) FIG. 5 shows an embodiment of an overall process flow. At 400, a deposition surface receives a blanket charge at 400. Another device, such as an ionographic print head, selectively neutralizes charge from the deposition surface at 402. Meanwhile, the system generates an aerosol from a powder at 404 and transports it to the deposition surface 406. While the aerosol is in transport, it undergoes charging at 408. As the aerosol reaches the deposition surface it is fused onto the surface to form the desired structures at 410. In an optional step, a support material fills the gaps, discussed previously.

(17) In this manner, three-dimensional additive manufacturing can create parts in a manufacturing process using powders. This may provide a less complex and less expensive manufacturing process for formation of a polymer for spray deposition.

(18) It will be appreciated that variants of the above-disclosed and other features and functions, or alternatives thereof, may be combined into many other different systems or applications. Various presently unforeseen or unanticipated alternatives, modifications, variations, or improvements therein may be subsequently made by those skilled in the art which are also intended to be encompassed by the following claims.