MIXING POWDERED BUILD MATERIAL FOR ADDITIVE MANUFACTURING
20190030812 ยท 2019-01-31
Inventors
- Bradley B. Branham (Vancouver, WA, US)
- Justin M. Roman (Portland, OR, US)
- Wesley R. Schalk (Camas, WA, US)
Cpc classification
B01F29/4022
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B33Y30/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01F29/40112
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01F2215/0422
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01F35/53
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C64/393
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01F29/31
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01F35/331
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01F31/10
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B33Y40/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01F35/332
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01F35/2209
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B33Y50/02
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
B29C64/165
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C64/393
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
In one example, a group of interchangeable supply modules to hold powdered build material for additive manufacturing. Each supply module in the group includes an exterior sized and shaped to fit into a mixer; an interior defining a non-circular mixing chamber, and an outlet through which powdered build material may leave the mixing chamber.
Claims
1. A group of interchangeable supply modules to hold powdered build material for additive manufacturing, each supply module having: an exterior sized and shaped to fit into a mixer; an interior defining a non-circular mixing chamber; and an outlet through which powdered build material may leave the mixing chamber.
2. The group of claim 1, comprising powdered build material in the mixing chamber of at least one of the supply modules.
3. The group of claim 1, where the mixing chamber in at least some of the supply modules comprises a rectangular mixing chamber.
4. The group of claim 1, where the mixing chamber in at least some of the supply modules comprises an irregularly shaped mixing chamber.
5. The group of claim 1, where the mixing chamber in some of the supply modules is rectangular and the mixing chamber in some of the supply modules has an irregular shape.
6. The group of claim 1, where the mixing chamber in each supply module includes a hopper feature to funnel powdered build material to the outlet.
7. A powdered build material supply system for additive manufacturing, the system comprising: a mixer; multiple interchangeable supply modules each defining a non-circular interior mixing chamber to hold powdered build material and each being removably loadable into in the mixer; and a programmable controller to rotate a supply module loaded into the mixer aperiodically.
8. The system of claim 7, comprising a dispenser operatively connected to the mixer to receive powdered build material from the mixing chamber when a supply module is loaded into the mixer and to dispense powdered build material for fusing.
9. The system of claim 7, where the mixing chamber in each supply module is rectangular or irregularly shaped.
10. The system of claim 9, where the mixing chamber in each supply module includes: an outlet through which powdered build material may flow out of the chamber; and a hopper feature to funnel powdered build material to the outlet.
11. The system of claim 10, where the mixing chamber in at least some of the supply modules is defined by an arc and two straight lines that converge at the outlet and the hopper feature is defined by the two straight lines that converge at the outlet.
12. The system of claim 7, where each of the interchangeable supply modules is reusable.
13. A powdered build material supply system for additive manufacturing, the system comprising: a mixer that includes a sleeve; multiple interchangeable supply modules each defining a non-circular interior mixing chamber to hold powdered build material and each being removably loadable into in the sleeve to rotate with the sleeve; a drive mechanism to rotate the sleeve; and a controller operatively connected to the drive mechanism, the controller having mixing instructions thereon that when executed cause the drive mechanism to rotate the sleeve aperiodically.
14. The system of claim 13, where: the drive mechanism is to translate the sleeve; and the mixing instructions include instructions that when executed cause the drive mechanism to translate the sleeve aperiodically.
15. The system of claim 13, where: the drive mechanism is to pivot the sleeve; and the mixing instructions include instructions that when executed cause the drive mechanism to pivot the sleeve aperiodically.
Description
DRAWINGS
[0002]
[0003]
[0004]
[0005]
[0006]
DESCRIPTION
[0007] The use of multi-component powders for additive manufacturing is increasing as manufacturers seek to improve quality and expand production to include a greater variety of printed parts. The component particles in such powders, however, may segregate during transportation and storage. Also, particles in a bulk supply of some powdered build materials tend to agglomerate when not actively mixed. Thus, for many additive manufacturing machines that use powdered build material, it usually will be desirable to thoroughly mix the powder before layering and fusing. The inventors have discovered that inducing a chaotic advection in the powder inside a supply container enables fast and thorough mixing on demand before powder is dispensed for layering and fusing. Accordingly, a chaotic advection mixer may be implemented in the manufacturing machine itself, using interchangeable supply modules for example, to help increase throughput and improve powder handling efficiency.
[0008] The examples described below and shown in the figures illustrate but do not limit the scope of the patent, which is defined in the Claims following this Description.
[0009] As used in this document: agitate means to move simultaneously in more than one degree of freedom of motion; and/or means at least one of the connected things; non-circular means not circular in any cross-section orthogonal to the axis of rotation; irregular shape means a shape that has a cross-section orthogonal to the axis of rotation with at least one straight line and at least one curve; a processor readable medium is any non-transitory tangible medium that can embody, contain, store, or maintain instructions for use by a processor; and work area means any suitable structural area to support or contain build material for fusing, including underlying layers of build material and in-process slice and other object structures.
[0010]
[0011] Referring first to
[0012] Each dispenser 20 may be implemented, for example, as a supply tray, feed cartridge, hopper or other dispensing device that presents build material 14 to a spreader roller 24 or other suitable layering device for layering build material 14 on to a work area 26, as shown in
[0013] Additive manufacturing machine 10 also includes a fusing agent dispenser 32 and a source 34 of light or other fusing energy. In this example, fusing agent dispenser 32 is mounted to a movable carriage 36 that carries dispenser 32 back and forth over work area 26 on rail 30. Also, in this example, energy source 34 is implemented as a pair of energy bars 34 mounted to roller carriage 28. A programmable controller 38 includes the processing resources, memory and instructions, and the electronic circuitry and components needed to control the operative elements of machine 10 according to the control data and other instructions to manufacture an object.
[0014] In operation, build material 14 is mixed in supply module 18 and conveyed to dispensers 20 from module 18 directly or through mixer 16. Any suitable conveyance may be used. Each dispenser 20 presents the build material alternately to spreader roller 24 for layering over work area 26. A fusing agent is selectively applied to layered build material in a pattern corresponding to an object slice, as fusing agent dispenser 32 on carriage 36 is moved over work area 26. One or both energy bars 34 are energized to expose the patterned area to light or other electromagnetic radiation to fuse build material where fusing agent has been applied, as carriage 28 carrying energy bars 34 is moved over work area 26. The fusing agent absorbs energy to help sinter, melt or otherwise fuse the patterned build material. Manufacturing proceeds layer by layer and slice by slice until the object is complete.
[0015] Referring now also to
[0016] Aperiodic rotation may be achieved by intermittently varying the angular velocity, the angular displacement, and/or the direction of rotation of mixing chamber 40 through a number of cycles or for a duration corresponding to the desired mixing. In one example, which may be suitable for mixing a polymer based powder 14 in a square mixing chamber 40, mixing chamber 40 is rotated in the following sequence in which both the angular velocity, the angular displacement and the direction of rotation are varied aperiodically throughout a sequence of 10 cycles (a negative displacement indicates counter-clockwise rotation): [0017] 1. rotate clockwise 5 radians at 7 radians/second (time =0.7s); [0018] 2. rotate counter-clockwise 7 radians at 6 radians/second (time=1.2s), [0019] 3. rotate clockwise 1 radian at 10 radians/second (time=0.1s), [0020] 4. rotate clockwise 21 radians at 5 radians/second (time=4.2s); [0021] 5. rotate counter-clockwise 15 radians at 4 radians/second (time=3.8s); [0022] 6. rotate clockwise 22 radians at 10 radians/second (time=2.2s); [0023] 7. rotate counter-clockwise 5 radians at 9 radians/second (time=0.6s); [0024] 8. rotate clockwise 21 radians at 2 radians/second (time=10.5s), [0025] 9. rotate counter-clockwise 18 radians at 9 radians/second (time=2.0s), and [0026] 10. rotate counter-clockwise 13 radians at 7 radians/second (time=1.9s).
The angular displacement may be determined directly or the duration of each time interval may be used to determine the angular displacement. That is to say, a motor controller may be programmed to rotate the mixing chamber through a certain angular displacement at the desired angular speed or the motor controller may be programmed to rotate the mixing chamber for a certain time at the desired angular velocity to achieve the desired angular displacement.
[0027] Aperiodic angular displacement a may be determined, for example, according to Equation 1.
.sub.i=.sub.i1+[sgn(f.sub.A([1, 1]))*(.sub.max.sub.min)*f.sub.B([0, 1])]Equation 1
where .sub.max and .sub.min define the allowable range of angular displacement, f.sub.B([0,1]) is a probability distribution function to generate a random real number between 0 and 1 inclusive, and sgn(f.sub.A([1,1])) determines the direction of rotation according to a probability distribution function f.sub.A([1,1]). An aperiodicity algorithm such as that described by Equation 1 may be implemented, for example, in mixing instructions 44 on controller 38 in
[0028] While each supply module 18 in a group 22 in
[0029] As shown in
[0030] While a single mixer 16 is shown serving multiple dispensers 20 in the figures, more or few mixers and dispensers could be used. For example, an additive manufacturing machine 10 could include a mixer 16 for each of multiple dispensers 20. Also, a mixer 16 may be configured to load multiple powder supply modules 18 simultaneously, for example to increase the capacity of the mixer without also increasing the size of the individual supply modules.
[0031] Testing suggests the smooth, symmetrical flows in circular mixing chambers with constant or even periodic rotation can induce distinct shear layers that inhibit effectively mixing some powdered build materials. More effective mixing may be achieved using a non-circular or irregular shaped mixing chamber with aperiodic rotation, even when the mixing chamber is substantially full of powder thus enabling greater capacity for each supply module 18. Adding corners to the mixing chamber and aperiodicity to the rotation cause shear layers in the powder to cross unpredictably, thus inducing a chaotic advection to help improve mixing.
[0032] In another example, shown in
[0033] Drive mechanism 48 connected to sleeve 16 is configured to agitate supply module insert 18 at the direction of controller 38 executing mixing instructions 44. As noted above, agitate means to move simultaneously in more than one degree of freedom of motion. In this example, drive mechanism 48 is configured to move supply module insert 18 (through sleeve 16) in three degreesrotating module 18 on an axis 49, as indicated by arrow 70 in
[0034] An agitating mixer such as that illustrated in
[0035] The examples shown in the figures and described above illustrate but do not limit the patent, which is defined in the following Claims.
[0036] A, an, and the as used in the Claims means at least one.