Method for Producing a Three-Dimensional Shaped Object by Means of Layer-by-Layer Material Application
20230109613 · 2023-04-06
Inventors
Cpc classification
B33Y10/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C64/112
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29K2105/251
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B33Y70/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B33Y30/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C64/40
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
B29C64/153
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
B29C64/153
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C64/40
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B33Y10/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B33Y30/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
In the case of a method for producing a three-dimensional shaped object by means of layer-by-layer material application, a base surface for holding the three-dimensional shaped object, a liquid, flowable or powder-form first material that can solidify, a powder-form second material including thermoplastic powder particles, and a solvent are made available. From the first material, a negative mold layer having a cavity for a shaped-object layer to be produced is produced and solidified. The bottom of the cavity is charged to an electric potential having a first polarity, and the powder particles are charged to a potential having a second polarity. The powder particles are applied to a support surface that is positioned relative to the cavity in such a manner that the powder particles are transferred from the support surface into the cavity and form a shaped-object layer having a positive shape that matches the negative mold in this cavity. The shaped-object layer is sintered by means of the effect of heat. A planar surface is produced by means of material removal, which surface extends over the negative mold layer and the shaped-object layer. The above steps are repeated at least once. Afterward the negative mold layers are dissolved in the solvent.
Claims
1. A method for producing a three-dimensional shaped object by means of layer-by-layer material application, wherein geometry data for the shaped object, a support part having a base surface for holding the three-dimensional shaped object, a liquid or flowable first material, which can solidify, a powder-form, thermoplastic second material comprising powder particles, and a solvent in which the solidified first material is soluble are made available, a) wherein for the formation of a negative mold layer; material portions of the flowable, liquid or powder-form first material are applied, in accordance with the geometry data, to the base surface and/or to a solidified material layer situated on it, in such a manner that the negative mold layer has at least one cavity on its surface that faces away from the base surface, which cavity has a negative mold of a shaped object layer to be produced, b) wherein the negative mold layer is solidified, c) wherein at least the bottom of the cavity, formed by the base surface or by a solidified material layer situated on it, is charged to an electric potential having a first polarity, d) wherein powder particles of the second material are charged to an electric potential having a second polarity opposite to the first polarity and applied to a support surface of a particle support, over its full area, e) wherein the support surface, with the powder particles situated on it, is positioned facing the at least one cavity and relative to the cavity, in such a manner that the powder particles are transferred from the support surface into the cavity, and in it form a shaped object layer having a positive shape that matches the negative mold, f) wherein the shaped object layer obtained in this manner is sintered and solidified by means of the effect of heat, g) wherein regions of the solidified negative mold layer and/or of the solidified shaped object layer projecting beyond a plane arranged at a predetermined distance from the base surface are removed by means of material removal, in such a manner that a planar surface is produced, which extends over the negative mold layer and the shaped object layer, h) wherein Steps a) to g) are repeated at least once, and i) wherein afterward, the negative mold layers are brought into contact with the solvent, in such a manner that the solidified first material dissolves in the solvent.
2. The method according to claim 1, wherein the material portions of the first material are applied to the base surface and/or to the solidified negative mold layer situated on it and/or to a solidified shaped object layer by means of a material application printing process, preferably an inkjet printing process, and that the first material is a material that can be solidified by means of the effect of energy, to which energy is applied for solidifying the negative mold layer.
3. The method according to claim 2, wherein the first material has a working viscosity that is suitable for inkjet printing, which is less than 1000 mPa.Math.s, in particular less than 100 mPa.Math.s, possibly less than 30 mPa.Math.s, and preferably less than 20 mPa.Math.s, and is applied to the base surface and/or to the solidified material layer of the three-dimensional shaped object situated on it in the form of liquid droplets having a resolution of at least 180 dpi, in particular at least 360 dpi, and preferably at least 720 dpi or 1440 dpi.
4. The method according to claim 1, wherein in Step g) of claim 1, the regions of the solidified negative mold layer and/or of the solidified shaped object layer that project beyond the plane are removed by means of chip-removing or particle-removing material removal, in particular by means of milling, grinding, laser treatment, and cleaning and/or polishing.
5. The method according to claim 1, wherein the powder particles are triboelectrically charged in Step d) of claim 1.
6. The method according to claim 1, wherein the particle support has an electrically conductive layer having an insulation layer situated on it, and that an electric potential having the first polarity is applied to the electrically conductive layer, in such a manner that particles situated on the support surface are electrostatically drawn to it, through the insulation layer.
7. The method according to claim 1, wherein the particle support has an electrically conductive layer having an active layer situated on it, the electric conductivity of which can be changed by means of being exposed to optical radiation, that the active layer is selectively structured by means of an electrophotography process, using an electric potential, that the active layer is afterward brought into contact with the powder particles of the second material, in such a manner that these adhere to the active layer as a function of the structuring of the active layer with the electric potential, and that the active layer, structured with the powder particles in this manner, is positioned on the cavity so as to transfer the powder particles into the cavity.
8. The method according to claim 1, wherein in Step d) of claim 1, the powder particles are charged using a triboelectric charging device that has a reservoir filled with the powder particles, and a stirring unit that stands in contact with the powder particles, which unit is structured and moved relative to the powder particles in such a manner that these are electrically charged.
9. The method according to claim 1, wherein a coating roll is used as the particle support, the mantle surface of which roll serves as a support surface for the powder particles, that the mantle surface is brought into contact, at a first location, with the powder particles having the potential of the second polarity, and the coating roll is rotated about the roll axis of the coating roll, relative to the first location, for full-area coating of the active mantle surface with the powder particles, and that the mantle surface is turned to face the cavity at a second location coated with the powder particles, which location is offset from the first location in the circumference direction of the mantle surface, and positioned relatively close to the cavity, in such a manner that the powder particles are transferred from the mantle surface into the cavity to form the shaped object layer.
10. The method according to claim 9, wherein powder particles that adhere to a section of the mantle surface of the coating roll, which section lies behind the second location and ahead of the first location in the direction of rotation, are removed from the mantle surface and transported back into the reservoir.
11. The method according to claim 9, wherein a cylindrical roll is used as the coating roll, that the support part that has the base surface i) is displaced, for application of a first material layer, proceeding from a starting position, in a forward transport direction relative to the coating roll, ii) afterward, it is moved back, relative to the coating roll, into the starting position, iii) then, for application of a second material layer, it is displaced once again, relative to the coating roll, in the forward transport direction, and that the support part is lowered during and/or between Steps i) to iii), relative to the coating roll.
12. The method according to claim 9, wherein the support part having the base surface is rotated during the material application and, if necessary, during solidification of the materials, about an axis of rotation that is arranged transverse to the cylinder axis of the coating roll, and, if necessary, lowered relative to the coating roll during the rotational movement, and that the coating roll is structured as a conical roll, the roll cross-section of which decreases, proceeding from its end farthest away from the axis of rotation to its other end, which is arranged closer to the axis of rotation.
13. The method according to claim 9, wherein a feed roll for the powder particles is made available, which roll is at a distance from the mantle surface of the coating roll with its mantle surface, by a roll gap, that the feed roll has an electrically conductive feed roll layer on its mantle surface, with an insulation layer situated on it, that an electric potential having the second polarity is applied to the feed roll layer, in such a manner that particles situated on the mantle surface of the feed roll are electrostatically attracted to this layer, that the mantle surface of the feed roll is brought into contact with the powder particles at a location that is at a distance from the roll gap, and the feed roll is rotated about its axis, in such a manner that powder particles situated on the mantle surface of the feed roll get into the roll gap, and that the potential applied to the feed roll layer and the potential applied to the electrically conductive layer of the coating roll are selected in such a manner that the powder particles are transferred in the roll gap, from the mantle surface of the feed roll to the mantle surface of the coating roll.
14. The method according to claim 9, wherein magnetically conductive carrier particles are made available and brought into contact with the powder particles of the second material, in such a manner that the powder particles remain releasably adhering to the carrier particles, that a magnetic feed roll for the powder particles is made available, which is spaced apart from the mantle surface of the coating roll by a roll gap with its mantle surface, that the magnetic carrier particles, with the powder particles adhering to them, are brought into contact with the mantle surface of the feed roll at a location at a distance from the roll gap, in such a manner that the carrier particles remain adhering to the mantle surface of the feed roll magnetically, that the feed roll is rotated about its axis in such a manner that carrier particles situated on the mantle surface of the feed roll, with the powder particles adhering to them, are first moved past a stripping device, to strip off carrier particles coated with powder particles and, after having passed through the stripping device, get into the roll gap, and that the potential of the coating roll is selected in such a manner, in deviation from the potential of the powder particles adhering to the carrier particles, that the powder particles are released from the carrier particles in the roll gap and transferred to the mantle surface of the coating roll.
15. The method according to claim 9, wherein magnetically conductive carrier particles are made available and brought into contact with the powder particles of the second material, in such a manner that the powder particles remain releasably adhering to the carrier particles, that a coating roll having a magnetic mantle surface is made available, which is spaced apart from the bottom of the cavity to be filled with the powder particles by a transfer gap, that the magnetic carrier particles, with the powder particles adhering to them, are brought into contact with the mantle surface of the coating roll at a location that is at a distance from the cavity, in such a manner that the carrier particles remain adhering to the mantle surface of the coating roll magnetically, that the coating roll is rotated about its axis in such a manner that carrier particles situated on the mantle surface of the coating roll, with the powder particles adhering to them, are first moved past a stripping device to strip off carrier particles coated with powder particles, and after having passed through the stripping device get into the transfer gap, and that the potential of the bottom of the cavity is selected in such a manner, in deviation from the potential of the powder particles adhering to the carrier particles, that the powder particles are released from the carrier particles in the transfer gap and transferred to the bottom of the cavity.
16. The method according to claim 1, wherein preferably an electrically conductive material is used as the first material, and preferably an electrically insulating material is used as the second material, that at least the solidified negative mold layer arranged closest to the support surface of the particle support is brought to an electric potential that differs from the potential of the electrically conductive region of the particle support and from the electric potential of the powder particles of the second material situated on the particle support, in such a manner that during positioning of this negative mold layer on the support surface of the particle support, fewer, in particular 50% fewer, possibly 70% fewer and preferably 90% fewer powder particles per surface unit are transferred to the negative mold layer than per surface unit in at least one cavity of this negative mold layer when the cavity is positioned on the support surface of the particle support.
17. The method according to claim 1, wherein the powder-form second material comprises a photoinitiator, that the thermoplastic powder particles have a polymer and/or copolymer, and that the photoinitiator is activated by means of irradiation with electromagnetic radiation after sintering, so as to cross-link the polymer.
18. The method according to claim 1, wherein the support part has at least two electrodes, which are laterally offset from one another in a top view and engage into one another in a comb-like manner on the base surface, and that an electric voltage is applied to the electrodes, in such a manner that the electric potential having the first polarity occurs at the bottom of the cavity.
19. The method according to claim 18, wherein the electric voltage applied to the electrodes is increased at least once, in terms of amount, between application of the first and application of the last negative mold layer.
20. The method according to claim 18, wherein a measurement signal for the electric potential is detected at the level of the bottom of the cavity and compared with a reference value or a reference value range, and that if a deviation occurs between the measurement signal and the reference value or the reference value range, the electric voltage at the electrodes is changed in the sense of a reduction in the deviation.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0078] In the following, exemplary embodiments of the invention are explained in greater detail. The drawing shows:
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DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0098] In the case of a method for producing a three-dimensional shaped object 1 by means of layer-by-layer material application, geometry data for the shaped object 1 are made available by a control unit that communicates with a computer on which software is running. Furthermore a plate-shaped, electrically conductive support part 2 having a base surface 3 arranged in a horizontal plane is made available for holding the shaped object 1.
[0099] A first exemplary embodiment of the method is carried out using the apparatus shown in
[0100] In the case of the first exemplary embodiment, a liquid first material 4 that can be solidified, a powder-form second material 5 that can be solidified and comprises thermoplastic powder particles, and water as a solvent for the solidified first material 4 are made available. The solidified second material 5 is not soluble in the solvent. The second material 5 has a greater strength, in the solidified state, than the solidified first material 4, due to the solid particles contained in it. The first material 4 is a polymer that contains a photoinitiator and can be cross-linked by means of irradiation with ultraviolet radiation.
[0101] The liquid first material 4 is arranged in a first reservoir 6, and the powder-form second material 5 is arranged in a second reservoir 7. The first reservoir 6 is connected with a first dispensing device 8 for the first material 4, by way of a line. The first reservoir 6 is configured as an essentially closed container, and the second reservoir 7 is configured as a basin.
[0102] The first dispensing device 8 has a first inkjet print head having a plurality of jets arranged in a row, not shown in any detail in the drawing, which are directed at the base surface 3 or at a solidified material layer of the first and/or second material 4, 5 situated on it, to dispense material portions of the first material 4. The row of jets is arranged parallel to the plane of the base surface 3, and extends transverse to the circumference direction of the base surface 3, preferably essentially radially relative to its center.
[0103] The support part 2 and the first dispensing device 8 can be rotated relative to one another in the direction of the arrow 10, using a positioning device 9, and can be displaced parallel to the axis of rotation 11. During this process, points that lie in the base surface 3 and are at a distance from the axis of rotation 11 move along a path curve that is shaped as a spiral line or screw line.
[0104] The first dispensing device 8 and the first positioning device 9 are connected with a control device, not shown in any detail in the drawing, which has a data memory for storing the geometry data of the shaped object 1 to be produced. By means of the control device, both the process of dispensing the material portions of the first material 4 and the first positioning device 9 can be controlled as a function of the geometry data, in such a manner that negative mold layers 12 consisting of the flowable first material 4 can be applied to the base surface or to a solidified material layer of the first and/or second material 4, 5 previously applied to it (
[0105] A solidification device 14 is arranged behind the first dispensing device 8 in the direction of the arrow 10, by means of which device the liquid first material 4 applied to the base surface 3 or to a solidified material layer situated on it is solidified. For this purpose, the solidification device 14 has a first UV-radiation source, not shown in any detail in the drawing, by means of which device ultraviolet radiation can be given off onto the material layer of the first material to be solidified, in such a manner that a photo-cross-linking agent contained in the first material is activated, and the polymers contained in the first material 4 are cross-linked.
[0106] A second dispensing device 15 is arranged behind the solidification device 14 in the direction of the arrow 10, by means of which device the cavity/cavities 13 of the corresponding previously solidified negative mold layer 12 are filled with the second material 5, so as to form a shaped-object layer 16 (
[0107] The second dispensing device 15 has a corona charging device 17, which is arranged behind the solidification device 14 in the direction of the arrow 10 and has multiple corona wires 18. A negative electric potential is applied to the corona wires 18, which potential differs from the potential of a section of the base surface 3 positioned on the first dispensing device 8, and serves for electrically charging the bottom of the cavity 13 and, if applicable, the material layer of the first material 4 on its surface that faces the corona wires 18. By means of the electric potential applied to the corona wires 18, the air situated in the space between the corona wires 18 and the surface region of the base surface 3 that lies opposite it is ionized. When a material layer of the first material 4 on the base surface 3 and/or on a solidified material layer situated on it is moved past under the corona wires 18, in the direction of the arrow 10, the bottom of the cavity 13 and, if applicable, the surface of the material layer that consists of the first material 4, which faces the corona wires 18, is electrically charged to a positive first potential. The difference in potential between the corona wires 18 and the potential of the support part 2 can amount to 5 KV, for example.
[0108] As can be seen in
[0109] The feed roll 20A and the coating roll 21A are each configured as a truncated cone and arranged in such a manner that the imaginary cone tip assigned to its mantle surface lies on the axis of rotation 11 of the support part 2. The feed roll 20A and the coating roll 21A are each arranged so as to rotate about their longitudinal center axis. In
[0110] The feed roll 20A has an electrically conductive feed roll layer formed by its roll core, on which layer an electric insulation layer is arranged, which forms the mantle surface of the feed roll 20A. In a corresponding manner, the coating roll 21A has an electrically conductive layer 43, formed by its roll core, which is coated with an electric insulation layer 44 on its mantle surface.
[0111] In the exemplary embodiment shown in
[0112] In the second reservoir 7, the electrically charged powder particles come into contact with the mantle surface of the feed roll 20A at a contact location that is at a distance from the roll gap 24. The electrically conductive roll core of the feed roll 20A has a negative third potential applied to it, which deviates from the second potential and is selected in such a manner that the powder particles are electrostatically attracted to the mantle surface of the feed roll 20A. The third electric potential can be adjusted using a first setting element 26.
[0113] The feed roll 20A is rotated about its axis of rotation 22, which lies on the roll axis, in such a manner that powder particles situated on the mantle surface of the feed roll 20A get into the roll gap 24. On their way to the roll gap 24, the powder particles are moved through a gap having a defined gap width. In this way, the material thickness with which the mantle surface of the feed roll 20A is coated with the second material 5 is established. Excess material particles are stripped off the feed roll 20A at the gap.
[0114] A fourth potential is applied to the electrically conductive layer 43 of the coating roll 21A, which potential is adapted to the third potential in such a manner that the powder particles are released from the mantle surface of the feed roll 20A in the roll gap 24 and non-selectively transferred to the mantle surface of the coating roll 21A over the entire length of the roll gap 24. In this way, the mantle surface of the coating roll 21A is non-selectively coated with the powder particles, i.e., in an interruption-free manner. The fourth electric potential can be adjusted using a second setting element 27, preferably between a negative and a positive potential value, in particular from −1000 V to +1000 V.
[0115] By means of the rotational movement of the coating roll 21A about its axis of rotation 23 and the rotational movement of the base surface 3 about the axis of rotation 11, the powder particles situated on the mantle surface of the coating roll 21A get to a material dispensing location that is offset from the roll gap 24 in the circumference direction of the mantle surface, and faces the cavity 13 in the material layer of the first material 4. During this process, the powder particles are positioned closely relative to the cavity 13, in such a manner that they come loose from the mantle surface of the coating roll 21A due to a force brought about by means of the difference in potential between the fourth and the first potential, and are transferred into the cavity 13 to form the shaped-object layer 16. During this process, the cavity 13 is completely filled with the second material 5.
[0116] Powder particles that are not released from the mantle surface of the coating roll 21A at the material dispensing location are removed from the mantle surface of the coating roll 21A by means of a cleaning device 39. The cleaning device 39 has a scraper 40 that engages on the mantle surface of the coating roll 21A, and a cleaning roll 41, which is driven to rotate about an axis arranged parallel to the axis of rotation of the coating roll 21A, counter to the direction of rotation of the coating roll 21A. The scraper 40 and the cleaning roll 41 are arranged behind the material dispensing location and ahead of the feed roll 20A in the direction of rotation of the coating roll 21A. To remove material particles, the cleaning roll 41 makes contact, at its outer circumference, with the mantle surface of the coating roll 21A. The scraper 40 and the cleaning roll 41 are arranged in a collection container into which the material particles removed from the mantle surface of the coating roll 21A are discharged. At the bottom of the collection container, there is a conveying screw 42, by means of which the powder particles can be transported back into the second reservoir 7 by the cleaning device 39, so as to feed them to renewed use (
[0117] A heat treatment station 28 is arranged behind the material dispensing location at which the cavity 13 was filled with the second material 5, in the direction of the arrow 10, which station can comprise, for example, an infrared heater and/or a flash lamp. As it passes by the heat treatment station 28, the second material 5 that was previously filled into the cavity 13 is thermally sintered, wherein the powder particles contained in it melt together with one another and, if applicable, with a layer composed of the second material 5 that is situated underneath.
[0118] If necessary, a cross-linking device 29 can be arranged behind the heat treatment station 28 in the direction of the arrow 10, at which device a polymer and/or copolymer contained in the second material 5 is cross-linked by means of irradiation with ultraviolet radiation and/or by means of irradiation with an electron beam, to form a duroplastic.
[0119] Afterward, in a further method step, regions of the solidified negative mold layer 12 and/or the solidified shaped-object layer 16 and/or solidified second material 5 that is arranged on the negative mold layer are removed by means of a chip-removing or particle-removing milling, grinding or polishing device 30 (
[0120] Now a further negative mold layer 12 (
[0121] In a further method step, the negative mold layers 12 are brought into contact with the solvent 33, in such a manner that the solidified first material 4 dissolves completely in the solvent. This can be achieved, for example, in that the layer stack consisting of the negative mold layers 12 and the shaped-object layers 16 is immersed in the solvent 33 situated in a container 34 for a predetermined period of time, and treated with ultrasound if necessary. Afterward the finished shaped object (
[0122] As can be seen in
[0123] In the case of a second exemplary embodiment, a magnetic toner is used in place of the non-magnetic toner. The method is carried out using an apparatus that differs from the apparatus shown in
[0124] In the case of the second exemplary embodiment, magnetically conductive carrier particles are made available and brought into contact with the powder particles of the second material 5 in the second reservoir 7, in such a manner that the powder particles remain releasably adhering to the carrier particles. The magnetically conductive carrier particles, with the powder particles adhering to them, are brought into contact with the mantle surface of the feed roll at a location that is at a distance from the roll gap, in such a manner that the carrier particles remain magnetically adhering to the mantle surface of the feed roll, which is shaped as a cone mantle.
[0125] During the rotation of the feed roll about its axis, the carrier particles situated on the mantle surface of the feed roll, with the powder particles adhering to them, are first moved past a stripping device 37, at which the carrier particles, coated with powder particles, are removed from the conical mantle surface of the feed roll. As can be seen in
[0126] An electrical potential that deviates from the potential of the powder particles adhering to the carrier particles is applied to the electrically conductive roll core of the coating roll 21A, which potential is selected in such a manner that the powder particles are released from the carrier particles in the roll gap and transferred to the mantle surface of the coating roll 21A. The carrier particles remain on the mantle surface of the feed roll and get back into the region of effect of the stirring units 25, due to the rotational movement of the roll, where they are once again coated with powder particles (toner) of the second material.
[0127] To carry out a third exemplary embodiment, the apparatus shown in
[0128] Differing from the first and second exemplary embodiment, in the case of the third exemplary embodiment the support part 2 having the base surface 3 is not rotated but rather, in order to apply a material layer, [0129] a) it is displaced from a starting position, in a transport direction 38, into an end position, and [0130] b) afterward—if a further material layer is supposed to be applied—it is displaced from the end position, counter to the transport direction 38, back into the starting position.
[0131] Furthermore, the support part 2 is lowered relative to the coating roll, during and/or between Steps a) and b). The steps mentioned above are repeated during each application of a material layer until all the material layers of the shaped object 1 have been layered one on top of the other.
[0132] For the remainder, the third exemplary embodiment corresponds to the first exemplary embodiment. The description of the first exemplary embodiment therefore applies analogously to the third exemplary embodiment in this regard.
[0133] In the case of a fourth exemplary embodiment, a magnetic toner is used in place of the non-magnetic toner. The method is carried out using an apparatus that differs from the apparatus shown in
[0134] In the case of the first to fourth exemplary embodiment and the fifth exemplary embodiment shown in
[0135] In the case of a sixth exemplary embodiment shown in
[0136] This is achieved in that an electrically conductive material is used as the first material 4 and an electrically insulating material is used as the second material 5, and that the negative mold layer 12 is set to an electric potential that differs from the electric potential of the powder particles of the second material situated on the mantle surface of the coating roll 21B and from the potential of the electrically conductive layer 43 of the coating roll 21B such that during positioning of the negative mold layer 12 on the mantle surface of the coating roll 21B, practically no powder particles are transferred from the mantle surface to the negative mold layer 12. In the case of the exemplary embodiment in
[0137] In the case of a seventh exemplary embodiment shown in
[0138] As can be seen in
[0139] A constant electric voltage is applied between the electrodes 47A, 47B, which voltage can be adjusted by means of a fourth setting element 51, preferably to a value between 0 and −45 kV. An electrode 48B is at ground potential. The electric field generated by the voltage penetrates the negative mold layers 12 and the shaped-object layers 16. The first material 4 and the second material 5 each contain dipoles that are oriented in the electric field, approximately parallel to its field lines. In this way powder particles situated on the mantle surface of the coating roll 21B, which get into the transfer gap 47, are electrostatically attracted to the bottom of the cavity 13 in such a manner that they come loose from the mantle surface of the coating roll 21B and settle down onto the bottom of the cavity 13.
[0140] As needed, the electric potential at the bottom of the cavity 13 can be measured, for example, using a probe not shown in any detail in the drawing, and compared with a reference value. If a deviation between the measured value and the reference value is determined, the potential that is applied to the electrodes 47A, 47B of the support part 2 is changed in the sense of a reduction in the deviation. The potential at the bottom of the cavity 13 can therefore be regulated to the reference value. In this way, the potential at the bottom of the cavity 13 is prevented from decreasing, in terms of amount, with an increasing number of material layers or negative mold layers applied to the base surface 3, when the distance between the bottom of the cavity 13 and the electrodes 47A, 47B increases.
[0141] For the remainder, the seventh exemplary embodiment essentially corresponds to the exemplary embodiment according to
[0142] In the case of an eighth exemplary embodiment shown in
[0143] The magnetic carrier particles with the powder particles adhering to them are brought into contact with the mantle surface of the coating roll 21B at a location spaced apart from the cavity 13, in such a manner that the carrier particles coated with the powder particles remain magnetically adhering to the mantle surface of the coating roll 21B.
[0144] The coating roll 21B is rotated about its axis of rotation 22, in such a manner that carrier particles situated on the mantle surface of the coating roll 21B, with the powder particles adhering to them, are first moved past a stripping device 37′ to strip off carrier particles coated with powder particles, and after passing through the stripping device 37′ they get into the transfer gap 47. Due to the electric field applied between the electrodes 47A, 47B, the powder particles situated on the carrier particles, which get into the transfer gap 47 on the mantle surface of the coating roll, are electrostatically attracted to the bottom of the cavity 13 in such a manner that they come loose from the carrier particles and settle on the bottom of the cavity 13.
[0145] For the remainder, the eighth exemplary embodiment essentially corresponds to the seventh exemplary embodiment. In this regard, the description of the seventh exemplary embodiment applies accordingly to the eighth exemplary embodiment.