METHOD OF FABRICATING SPACE SATELLITE TANK COMPONENTS UTILIZING ADDITIVE MANUFACTURING AND SPIN FORMING
20180347756 ยท 2018-12-06
Inventors
Cpc classification
B33Y10/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B21D22/16
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
F17C2260/01
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
B23P15/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B22F7/08
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
F17C2209/21
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F17C2203/0636
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
B22F2998/10
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B33Y80/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B21D22/16
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
F17C1/14
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
B21D51/18
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B22F2005/005
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
F17C2201/0128
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
B22F10/28
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B23K15/0086
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
F17C2270/0186
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
B23K9/167
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B22F5/10
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
F17C2203/012
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
B23K9/1093
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B22F10/25
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B22F10/28
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
F17C2203/0639
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
B22F2998/10
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B22F10/25
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
F17C1/08
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
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
F17C2203/0646
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
F17C1/08
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
B23K15/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B23K9/10
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B23K9/04
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B22F7/08
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B22F3/105
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B23K9/167
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B21D22/16
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B21D51/18
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
F17C1/14
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Abstract
A thin wall spinformed metallic tank shell includes a first region with a first thickness and at least one second region with a second thickness greater than the first thickness including structural features formed by an additive manufacturing process, where the features are added outside and inside of the metallic tank shell and can include: polar bosses added to one or both external polar regions of a spherical section of the tank; mounting tabs on a circumferential skirt of the tank; mounting rings containing threaded holes attached to the interior or exterior surface of the tank; mounting trunnions attached to the external surface of the tank; propellant management devices attached to the interior surface of the tank; structural reinforcement vanes and ribs attached to the inside surface of the tank; and brackets and/or shelves attached to the inside surface of the tank.
Claims
1. A thin wall spinformed metallic tank shell comprising: a first region with a first thickness; and at least one second region with a second thickness greater than the first thickness including structural features formed by an additive manufacturing process, wherein the structural features comprise at least one of: (a) polar bosses added to one or both external polar regions of a spherical section of the tank; (b) mounting tabs on a circumferential skirt of the tank; (c) mounting rings containing threaded holes attached to the interior or exterior surface of the tank; (d) mounting trunnions attached to the external surface of the tank; (e) propellant management devices (PMD) attached to the interior surface of the tank; (f) structural reinforcement vanes and ribs attached to the inside surface of the tank; and (g) brackets and/or shelves attached to the inside surface of the tank.
2. The metallic tank shell of claim 1, wherein the structural features are formed from a metal comprising one or more of aluminum, titanium, steel, and alloys thereof.
3. The metallic tank shell of claim 2, wherein the metal comprises 6061, 2219, 2014 aluminum alloys and CP Ti, Ti-6Al-4V, Ti-15V-3Cr-3Sn-3Al titanium alloys.
4. The metallic tank shell of claim 1, wherein the additive manufacturing process comprises powder based and wire based direct metal deposition processes.
5. The metallic tank shell of claim 4, wherein powder based direct metal deposition comprises at least one of laser engineered net shaping (LENS), direct metal laser sintering (DMLS), selected laser melting, laser powder injection, and direct metal deposition (DMD).
6. The metallic tank shell of claim 4, wherein wire based direct metal deposition comprises at least one of wire feed laser deposition, electron beam additive manufacturing (EBAM), hot wire gas tungsten arc welding (HW-GTAW), and ion fusion formation (IFF).
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0021] One method to resolve the fabrication inefficiencies addressed above is the use of additive manufacturing (AM) to produce the tank components with reduced waste material. This is accomplished by molten metal deposition onto a substrate using techniques similar to welding, wherein material is additively applied layer by layer. An example method is the use of an electron beam welding system with a filler wire feeder to deposit weld metal onto a substrate and then continue to deposit weld metal until the complete part is fabricated. To achieve material quality and mechanical properties similar to plate or forged metals, the parts are protected from atmospheric reactions through the use of a vacuum environment. Additionally, the thermal management of the process has significant effects on the material's metallurgical structure and mechanical properties. Because the part is being created in a vacuum from molten metal, the entire part is subjected to significant exposure to high temperatures during the material deposition. Thermal expansion of the material being deposited causes the part size to vary during deposition. Thermal input to the process is provided from the electron beam and thermal output is provided through conduction into the previously deposited portion of the fabrication plus radiation, causing significant heat buildup during deposition. Thus, the part shape during fabrication is determined based on the final part sizing at its use temperature as well as the thermal buildup during fabrication. Depending on part size, configuration, and quality activities, it may be desirable to interrupt deposition periodically. During these interruptions the part's thermal condition and physical size changes, increasing the complexity of subsequent deposition activities. Similarly, the addition of local attachment features causes a change in the thermal profile of the part being fabricated and therefore the physical size and mechanical properties of the fabricated component.
[0022] The present invention is a method of fabricating space satellite tank components utilizing a combination of mandrel-based spinforming and additive manufacturing (AM). Initially the part (a dome is used for illustrative purposes, although other components such as cylinders are shown to be equally applicable to the process described) is produced from thin sheet metal. Unlike prior art, the locations of polar bosses or other tank attachment features are not required to be at final part thickness. Instead the thickness at these locations is driven by fabrication convenience and best shop practices.
[0023] After the part is spinformed the thickness of attachment locations are locally increased through additive manufacturing techniques. These may include, but are not limited to laser consolidation of powdered metal, and addition of wire utilizing conventional weld metal buildup processes such as gas tungsten arc, plasma arc, laser beam, electron beam, and others known in the art. The spinforming process provides a surface that can mate to thermal control tooling (heat sink devices, for example) to minimize thermal distortion of the dome during the additive manufacturing activities. This eliminates the negative thermal effects to the base material, or substrate (material at the location of instantaneous additive manufacturing processing). Examples of the work would include buildup of polar bosses on tanks and creation of mounting tabs and circumferential mounting features.
[0024] The process can also be used to generate features on the interior surfaces of spinformed domes for the purpose of mounting or supporting internal components such as propellant management devices (PMD), or for structural purposes such as reinforcement ribs. Mandrel-based spinforming does not typically allow the generation of raised features on the part's interior surface since the inner mold line of the part is in intimate contact with the outer surface of the mandrel during forming operations. Removal of the formed part from the mandrel at the conclusion of spinforming necessitates that the mandrel not create concavities or locally convex internal features. Utilizing additive manufacturing to build up features on the interior of spinformed tank components enables the use of thin spinformed domes without the need for complex milling of interior cavities from thicker materials.
[0025] Similar to the illustration using domes provided above, it will be apparent to one skilled in the art that parts of cylindrical, conical, or other shapes can be fabricated on internal mandrels and subsequently have internal and external features applied through additive manufacturing.
[0026] An example of a space satellite propellant tank is shown in
[0027] Three general classes of additive manufacturing for depositing metal on a substrate are powder based layer by layer, powder based direct metal deposition, and wire based direct metal deposition. Powder based layer by layer fabrication of metal structures is not suitable for forming individual metallic structures on the uneven surfaces encountered on internal and external satellite tank features. Powder based and wire based direct metal deposition of metallic structural features are suitable processes for the present invention. In both processes, metal is fed to a localized molten pool on a substrate created by a focused energy beam traversing the substrate. As the molten pool solidifies the added metal forms a three dimensional structure according to a computer model stored in the memory of the direct metal deposition system. Closed loop feedback control systems managing the energy beam, traverse rate, metal feed rate, atmosphere control, and other parameters known in the art allow fully dense additively manufactured near net shapes of a wide variety of alloys.
[0028] An exemplary wire feed additive manufacturing (AM) system is shown in
[0029] A schematic representation of an exemplary powder based direct metal deposition additive manufacturing system is shown in
[0030] An example of a structural feature added to a spinformed satellite tank shell is shown in
[0031] Another example of a structural feature added to a spinformed satellite tank is the mounting ring shown in
[0032] A third example of an external structural feature added to a spinformed satellite tank shell is a trunnion for supporting the tank shell shown in
[0033] A fourth example of an external structural feature added to a spinformed satellite tank shell by additive manufacturing is shown in
[0034] An example of an internal structural feature added to a spinformed satellite tank shell by additive manufacturing is shown in
[0035] Method 130 of forming structural features on thin wall metallic satellite tank shells is shown in
[0036]
DISCUSSION OF POSSIBLE EMBODIMENTS
[0037] The following are nonexclusive descriptions of possible embodiments of the present invention.
[0038] A method of forming metallic structural features in a specific region of a thin wall spinformed metallic tank shell may include: forming a thin wall metallic tank shell blank by spinforming a metal sheet over a mandrel; removing the tank shell blank from the mandrel; mounting the blank in an additive manufacturing system; and adding the metallic structural features to the tank shell according to a 3D model stored in memory in the additive manufacturing system.
[0039] The method of the preceding paragraph can optionally include, additionally and/or alternatively any, one or more of the following features, configurations and/or additional components:
[0040] The thickness of the metal sheet may be from about 0.125 in. (0.318 cm) to about 0.5 in. (1.27 cm).
[0041] The features may be added outside and inside of the metallic tank shell.
[0042] The features added to the outside of the tank shell may be at least one of ribs, bosses, brackets, and shelves.
[0043] The features added to the inside of the tank shell may be at least one of ribs, shelves, and mounting structures for propellant management devices (PMD).
[0044] The metallic structural features may be composed of one or more of aluminum, titanium, steel, and alloys thereof.
[0045] The structural features may be composed of one or more 6061, 2219, 2014 aluminum alloys, and CP Ti, Ti-6Al-4V, Ti-15V-3Cr-3Sn-3Al titanium alloys.
[0046] The additive manufacturing system may be configured to perform powder based and wire based direct metal deposition processes.
[0047] The powder based direct metal deposition may be at least one of laser engineered net shaping (LENS), direct metal laser sintering (DMLS), selected laser melting, laser powder injection, and direct metal deposition (DMD).
[0048] The wire based direct metal deposition may be at least one of wire feed laser deposition, electron beam additive manufacturing (EBAM), hot wire gas tungsten arc welding (HW-GTAW), and ion fusion formation (IFF).
[0049] A thin wall spinformed metallic tank shell may include: a first region with a first thickness; at least one second region with a second thickness greater than the first thickness including structural features formed by an additive manufacturing process.
[0050] The thin wall spinformed metallic tank shell of the preceding paragraph can optionally include, additionally and/or alternatively any, one or more of the following features, configurations, and/or additional components:
[0051] The structural features may be on the outside or inside of the tank shell.
[0052] The structural features on the outside of the tank shell may be at least one of ribs, bosses, brackets, and shelves.
[0053] The structural features on the inside of the tank shell may be at least one of ribs, shelves, and mounting structures for propellant management devices (PMD).
[0054] The structural features may be formed from a metal comprising one or more of aluminum, titanium, steel, and alloys thereof.
[0055] The metal may be 6061, 2219, 2014 aluminum alloys and CP Ti, Ti-6Al-4V, Ti-15V-3Cr-3Sn-3Al titanium alloys.
[0056] The additive manufacturing process may be a powder based and wire based direct metal deposition process.
[0057] The powder based direct metal deposition may include at least one of laser engineered net shaping (LENS), direct metal laser sintering (DMLS), selected laser melting, laser powder injection, and direct metal deposition (DMD).
[0058] The wire based direct metal deposition may include one of wire feed laser deposition, electron beam additive manufacturing (EBAM), hot wire gas tungsten arc welding (HW-GTAW), and ion fusion formation (IFF).
[0059] While the invention has been described with reference to an exemplary embodiment(s), it will be understood by those skilled in the art that various changes may be made and equivalents may be substituted for elements thereof without departing from the scope of the invention. In addition, many modifications may be made to adapt a particular situation or material to the teachings of the invention without departing from the essential scope thereof. Therefore, it is intended that the invention not be limited to the particular embodiment(s) disclosed, but that the invention will include all embodiments falling within the scope of the appended claims.