APPARATUS AND PROCESS FOR PRODUCING ADDITIVE MANUFACTURED METAL MATRIX COMPOSITES AND ARTICLE OF MANUFACTURE THEREOF
20250109468 ยท 2025-04-03
Assignee
Inventors
- Robert Swartz (Highland Park, IL)
- John Bayldon (Northbrook, IL, US)
- Buckley Crist (Wilmette, IL, US)
- Eugene Gore (Des Plaines, IL, US)
Cpc classification
B33Y10/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B22F7/04
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B22F2007/045
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B22F7/08
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C64/112
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B33Y80/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B22F7/062
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B33Y30/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B22F12/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C67/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B22F2998/10
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B33Y40/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
C22C47/20
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
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
International classification
B22F12/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
A method, product, apparatus, and article of manufacture for the application of the Composite Based Additive Manufacturing (CBAM) method to produce objects in metal, and in metal fiber hybrids or composites. The approach has many advantages, including the ability to produce more complex geometries than conventional methods such as milling and casting, improved material properties, higher production rates and the elimination of complex fixturing, complex tool paths and tool changes and, for casting, the need for patterns and tools. The approach works by slicing a 3D model, selectively printing a fluid onto a sheet of substrate material for each layer based on the model, flooding onto the substrate a powdered metal to which the fluid adheres in printed areas, clamping and aligning a stack of coated sheets, heating the stacked sheets to melt the powdered metal and fuse the layers of substrate, and removing excess powder and unfused substrate.
Claims
1. A build block for a metal article of manufacture, comprising layers of substrate that consist of coated portions and uncoated portions, wherein at the coated portions of the layers, a powder containing metal has melted to act as a bonding agent that fuses together the layers of substrate; and wherein at the uncoated portions of the layers, no material acts as a bonding agent to fuse together the layers of substrate; whereby the build block may subsequently be subject to removal of the uncoated portions to define the metal article of manufacture through a non-powder metallurgy process.
2. The build block of claim 1 wherein the powder comprises solder powder.
3. The build block of claim 1 wherein the powder comprises flux.
4. The build block of claim 3 wherein the powder comprises metal and flux at a 50/50 ratio.
5. The build block of claim 1 wherein the substrate comprises nonwoven carbon fiber, and whereby the uncoated portions of the layers are fragile enough to be removed by abrasive blasting.
6. The build block of claim 5 wherein the substrate further comprises metal coating on said nonwoven carbon fiber, whereby coated portions of the layers result from the powder containing metal melting onto metal previously coated onto the nonwoven carbon fiber.
7. A metal article of manufacture made by the process of removing uncoated portions of layers from a build block of claim 1.
8. The metal article of manufacture of claim 7 wherein said removal comprises abrasion.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF INVENTION
Output of the Technique
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Description of the Technique
[0014]
Issues in Using Metals With the Technique
[0021] It has been discovered that metals can be used with this technique. In one example the substrate used is a non-woven carbon fiber veil such as available from Hollingsworth and Vose. Veils that have been metal coated can also be used. The veil or substrate is printed as described above on an inkjet printer using, for example, a HP45 thermal inkjet head with a solution primarily of de-ionized water, pyrrolidone and alcohol. The solution may have an anti-evaporant including glycols and pyrrolidones. This fluid is printed on the area of the substrate that would be part of the object, i.e., the printed area corresponds to a layer shape for the object. This is done for each layer as described in the previous applications. Each layer is flooded with a metal powder for example a solder powder. The excess powder is removed by mechanical, vacuum, vibration or compressed air or a combination of such methods. This leaves the solder powder selectively deposited. One of the problems with using a metal powder in a process of this kind is that the powder oxidizes so that that when heated to its melting point the particles of the powder will not fuse together well. There are a number of solutions to this problem, one such solution is to mix the metal powder with a powder flux such as rosin which acts as a reducing agent. A typical flux to metal powder ratio is about 50/50. Another method is to melt the powders in a reducing, vacuum and/or inert atmosphere oven. In this way other metals or alloys can be used, such as aluminum, steel, stainless steel, copper, brass, and titanium among others. In addition liquid flux may be used as or in combination with the printing fluid, through selective deposition methods such as inkjet printing.
[0022] As an example the metal powder can be mixed with a powder flux before it is deposited on the substrate. Then all the layers of the object are printed and stacked in register as described in the earlier applications. They are compressed and heated as described in the earlier applications. The heating temperature is raised to the melting point of the powder. The layers fuse together and produce a build block. After the build block is removed from the compression jig the build block is abrasively blasted and the areas where no powder adhered, that is the portions of the object that were not coated with metal, are abrasive blasted off, the uncoated carbon fiber being very fragile. What is left is a three dimensional carbon fiber metal composite of the part that was represented by the CAD model.
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[0025] As described in WO2014134224 183, U.S. Pub. No. US2016/0082695 A1 0178-0196 (the entirety of the publication which is incorporated by reference), the printed carbon fiber substrate 801 is placed onto a fixture using registration holes to align.
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