Depowdering an elastic 3D printed object
12415317 ยท 2025-09-16
Assignee
Inventors
- Edward Stanley PONOMAREV (San Diego, CA, US)
- Stephan Walter EMMENEGGER (San Diego, CA, US)
- Geoffrey Schmid (San Diego, CA, US)
Cpc classification
B08B5/02
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B33Y80/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B33Y40/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B08B1/34
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C64/379
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B33Y40/20
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
B08B1/34
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B08B5/02
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B08B5/04
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C64/379
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B33Y40/20
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
In one example, a process for depowdering an elastic object made with a 3D printer using powdered build material includes compressing the object progressively from one end of the object to another end of the object.
Claims
1. A depowdering method comprising: conveying, along a conveyor of a depowdering device and from a first end of the depowdering device to a second end of the depowdering device, an elastic object that has been additively manufactured using powdered build material; and compressing, by each of one or more squeezing devices of the depowdering device positioned above the conveyor, the elastic object progressively from a first end of the elastic object to a second end of the elastic object in correspondence with conveyance of the elastic object along the conveyor under the each of the one or more of squeezing devices, by coming into contact with and actively pressing down on the elastic object; wherein compression of the elastic object fluidizes unfused powdered build material clinging to the elastic object after additive manufacture, to depowder the elastic object.
2. The depowdering method of claim 1, wherein the one or more squeezing devices comprises a plurality of squeezing devices spatially arranged from the first end to the second end of the depowdering device, such that compressing the elastic object comprises comprising repeatedly compressing the elastic object progressively from the first end to the second end of the elastic object a number of times equal to a number of the plurality of squeezing devices.
3. The depowdering method of claim 1, further comprising vibrating and/or hammering, by each of the one or more of the squeezing devices, as the elastic object is conveyed along the conveyor along and is compressed by each of the one or more of the squeezing devices.
4. The process depowdering method of claim 1, further comprising blowing air through a lattice structure of the elastic object as the elastic object is conveyed along the conveyor, to remove the unfused powdered build material that has been fluidized from the elastic object.
5. The depowdering method of claim 1, comprising suctioning, through a plurality of openings of the conveyor and as the elastic object is conveyed along the conveyor, the unfused powdered build material that has been fluidized into a collection bin of the depowdering device positioned under the conveyor.
Description
DRAWINGS
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(5) The same part numbers designate the same or similar parts throughout the figures. The figures are not necessarily to scale.
DESCRIPTION
(6) In some 3D printing processes, object layers of corresponding digital slices are generated successively one after another in a powdered build material spread in layers over a build area. Heat is used to selectively fuse together the particles in each of the successive layers of build material powder in a desired pattern corresponding to the solid 3D object to be generated. Manufacturing proceeds layer by layer based on corresponding slices until the 3D object is complete. Multiple objects may be generated at the same time in the same layers of build material.
(7) When the 3D objects are complete, they are removed from the surrounding unfused build material. Some of the unfused build material may cling to the objects after they are removed from the powder bed. The subsequent process of removing unfused build material from the objects is commonly referred to as depowdering. Examples of powder based 3D printing include selective laser melting, selective laser sintering, and multi-jet fusion.
(8) Elastic midsoles for athletic and other footwear are now being manufactured with powder based 3D printers using thermoplastic polyurethane and other elastomeric build materials. Some midsoles are made with a lattice structure to provide the desired degree of cushioned foot support. It can be difficult to thoroughly remove unfused build material from latticed midsoles, for example removing agglomerated clumps of unfused build material trapped in the lattice structure.
(9) A new technique has been developed to more thoroughly depowder latticed midsoles and to help increase the depowdering operation throughput. In one example, a process for depowdering a latticed midsole includes compressing the midsole progressively from one end of the midsole to the other end of the midsole to flex each part of the lattice structure, loosening unfused build material within the structure while enabling an assembly line process to help increase processing throughput. For example, the localized flexing that occurs progressively along the length of an elastic, latticed midsole squeezed between two compression rollers helps break up clumps of agglomerated build material within the lattice structure while also breaking down the adhesion between unfused build material and the structure itself. Simultaneously with compressing the midsole, loose and loosened build material may be blown out of the lattice structure and off the midsole with pressurized air and vacuumed away for collection and recycling.
(10) Examples of the new depowdering technique not limited to latticed midsoles, lattice structures in general, or other elastic objects with complex geometries but may implemented with any elastic objects made with a 3D printer. The examples described herein illustrate but do not limit the scope of the patent which is defined in the Claims following this Description.
(11) As used in this document, and/or means one or more of the connected things; a nip means the region of a squeezing device where the squeezing parts are closest together; elastic means capable of recovering size and shape after deformation; and a computer readable medium means any non-transitory tangible medium that can embody, contain, store, or maintain information and instructions for execution by a processor and may include, for example, circuits, integrated circuits, ASICs (application specific integrated circuits), hard drives, random access memory (RAM), read-only memory (ROM), and flash memory.
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(13) In the example shown in
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(15) As shown in
(16) As shown in
(17) Also in this example, as shown in
(18) In one example, rollers 28 are implemented as idler rollers. In another example, rollers 28 are implemented as driven rollers. Also, where the degree of compression is controlled by rollers 28, as in the example shown in
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(22) A, an, and the as used in the Claims means one or more unless only one thing is recited. For example, a roller means one or more rollers and subsequent reference to the roller means the one or more rollers.
(23) The examples shown in the figures and described above illustrate but do not limit the scope of the patent, which is defined in the following Claims.