METAL POWDER MANUFACTURE USING A LIQUID METAL EJECTOR
20190351488 ยท 2019-11-21
Inventors
Cpc classification
B22F2999/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Y02P10/25
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
B22F2009/0892
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
Abstract
An ejector of liquid material to form spherical particles includes a crucible for retaining liquid material, an orifice area defining at least one orifice, and an actuator responsive to a voltage signal for causing material to be ejected from the crucible through the orifice. A method comprises applying a voltage signal of a first type and a second type to the actuator, causing a material droplet of a first size and a second size to be ejected through the orifice. Alternately or in addition, the orifice area defines a first orifice having a first diameter and a second orifice having a second diameter different from the first diameter, whereby a signal causes a material droplet of a first size to be ejected through the first orifice and a material droplet of a second size to be ejected through the second orifice.
Claims
1. A method of operating an ejector of liquid material to form spherical particles, the ejector having a crucible for retaining liquid material, structure associated with the crucible including an orifice area defining at least one orifice, and an actuator responsive to a voltage signal for causing material to be ejected from the crucible through the orifice, comprising: applying a voltage signal of a first type to the actuator, causing a material droplet of a first predetermined size to be ejected through the orifice; applying a voltage signal of a second type to the actuator, causing a material droplet of a second predetermined size to be ejected through the orifice.
2. The method of claim 1, the voltage signal of the first type and voltage signal of the second type differing by at least one of amplitude and duration.
3. The method of claim 1, the voltage signal of the first type and voltage signal of the second type each including a quiet period associated therewith.
4. The method of claim 1, further comprising: receiving a request for the ejector to create a predetermined amount of a mixture of droplets of the first predetermined size and the second predetermined size.
5. The method of claim 4, further comprising calculating how many voltage signals of the first type and voltage signals of the second type are required to create the mixture.
6. The method of claim 1, further comprising: a control system applying to the ejector signals of the first type for a first duration, and signals of the second type for a second duration.
7. The method of claim 6, the control system applying to the ejector signals of the first type for a first duration, and signals of the second type for a second duration, sequentially and repeatedly.
8. The method of claim 1, the orifice area defining a plurality of orifices, whereby a voltage signal causes ejection of at least one droplet from each of the plurality of orifices.
9. The method of claim 8, wherein the orifice area defines a first orifice having a first diameter and a second orifice having a second diameter different from the first diameter.
10. The method of claim 1, the material comprising pure metal.
11. The method of claim 1, the material comprising a metal alloy.
12. The method of claim 1, further comprising causing the droplet to be ejected into pure inert gas.
13. An ejector of liquid material suitable for forming spherical particles, comprising: a crucible for retaining liquid material, structure associated with the crucible including an orifice area defining a first orifice having a first diameter and a second orifice having a second diameter different from the first diameter, and an actuator responsive to a voltage signal for causing material to be ejected from the crucible through the orifice area, causing a material droplet of a first predetermined size to be ejected through the first orifice and a material droplet of a second predetermined size to be ejected through the second orifice.
14. The ejector of claim 13, the actuator including a coil disposed around a portion of the crucible, whereby a voltage signal applied to the coil creates Lorentz forces within the liquid material in the crucible.
15. The ejector of claim 13, the structure defining the orifice area being detachable from the crucible.
16. The ejector of claim 13, wherein an effective thickness of the structure forming each of the first and second orifice is comparable to the diameter of the orifice.
17. The ejector of claim 16, the second orifice defining a countersink.
18. The ejector of claim 13, the material comprising pure metal.
19. The ejector of claim 13, the material comprising a metal alloy.
20. The ejector of claim 13, the voltage signal including a quiet period associated therewith.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DESCRIPTION
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[0021] The structure of an ejector 30 in the present embodiment is that of a magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) ejector. The operation of such an ejector is described in detail in U.S. Pat. Nos. 9,616,494 and 10,040,119; and the specific configuration shown in those patents could be used in a practical embodiment as well. With regard to the
[0022] Feeding into the top of the cavity formed by lower crucible 32 and upper crucible 34 is a feed wire 40 made of a conductive material such as a pure metal or alloy (hereinafter simply the material), entering the top of the cavity through a tubular fitting 42. As described in the cited patents, the material is maintained in liquid form, such as at 850 degrees Celsius in the case of aluminum, as a pool in the cavity until ejected in droplet form through orifice area 36. Ejection is performed by creation of Lorentz forces created in the pool of material by electromagnetic forces via a coil 44, which in turn is associated with a control system (not shown) applying electrical voltage pulses thereto, generally in the manner described in the cited patents.
[0023]
[0024] In one practical embodiment of the present disclosure, a pulse rate is 400 Hz with a peak pulse current of 1200 amperes; the diameter of the droplets/beads achieved in this embodiment is 1250 microns. For the production of droplets to form powders, one practical implementation has been able to operate at voltages V in a range of 100V to 700V; current in a range of 100 A to 2000 A; and a time duration of at least a positive portion of a square wave of 5 to 400 microseconds. Broadly speaking, the two most significant inputs of a voltage signal affecting the resulting droplet/particle size are the voltage and the time duration of the pulse.
[0025] The ejected droplets, in one embodiment, could be caught in a liquid in catch pail 18 to achieve a high cooling rate or to dampen impact of the droplets when caught. Other methods, such as forcing inert gas upward to slow the droplets fall or a slide to redirect the beads, are contemplated within the present disclosure.
[0026] The above-described apparatus can be used to eject molten material as droplets and form spherical powder particles. For the purposes of creating metal powders useful for powder-bed fusion, as mentioned above (but for other industrial purposes as well), it is desirable to produce a powder having a predetermined proportion of particles of different sizes, such as constrained into relatively narrow ranges. In the case of powder-bed fusion,
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[0028] A powder-making apparatus as described above can be designed and operated to yield a powder sample having a multi-modal distribution of particle size such as shown in
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[0030] By providing an orifice area 36 of a single ejector 30 with a set of orifices of multiple predetermined diameters, a single orifice area can be made to produce droplets and resulting particles with a desired distribution of sizes.
[0031] As shown in the cross-section of
[0032] In various practical embodiments, the orifices in orifice area 36 can be formed integrally with the crucible holding the molten material, such as lower crucible 32 in
[0033] Another approach for obtaining metal particles of a desired size or size distribution is to manipulate the pulse signals to coil 44. In one practical embodiment, a pulse in the form of a largely square wave, having a positive phase and a negative phase, will cause ejection of a quantity of molten material through the orifice area 36. Broadly, a larger duration or amplitude of the pulse will yield a larger droplet and resulting particle. Assuming a uniform diameter of orifices in orifice area 36, with any given design of ejector, the amplitude or duration of pulses can be adjusted to obtain a desired particle size within a practical range.
[0034] If it is desired to obtain a sample of metal powder with a desired distribution of particle sizes, as is useful in powder-bed fusion, it is possible to make a single, largely-premixed sample directly in catch pail 18 in
[0035] At step 900, a control system or external general-purpose computer operative of the machine 10 receives a request for a sample, to be collected in catch pail 18, of fairly well-mixed particles D1, D2, D3 of predetermined desired diameters. At step 902 there can be calculated how many pulses would be required (again, based on design and/or experimentation) to make absolute desired amounts of each type of particle with the machine, to obtain the desired mixture. Then the machine is run (starts ejecting material from ejector 30) at step 904.
[0036] To obtain a mixture of particles of different diameters, approaching the even spatial distribution shown in
[0037] The two overall techniques described for obtaining particles of a desired size, use of differently-sized orifices and different types of pulses, can be used together, to yield a system capable of producing a mixture having a large number of discrete modes of particle sizes.
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[0040] As used herein, terms such as optimal, minimize, or maximize should be understood broadly, and not construed as requiring any mathematically-provable optimization.
[0041] The claims, as originally presented and as they may be amended, encompass variations, alternatives, modifications, improvements, equivalents, and substantial equivalents of the embodiments and teachings disclosed herein, including those that are presently unforeseen or unappreciated, and that, for example, may arise from applicants/patentees and others.