Abstract

Selective laser melting (SLM), a metal powder fusion additive manufacturing process, has the potential to manufacture complex components for aerospace and biomedical implants. Large-scale adaptation of these technologies is hampered due to the presence of defects such as porosity and part distortion. Nonuniform melt pool size is a major cause of these defects. The melt pool size changes due to heat from the previous powder bed tracks. In this work, the effect of heat sourced from neighbouring tracks was modelled and feedback control was designed. The objective of control is to regulate the melt pool cross-sectional area rejecting the effect of heat from neighbouring tracks within a layer of the powder bed. The SLM process’s thermal model was developed using the energy balance of lumped melt pool volume. The disturbing heat from neighbouring tracks was modelled as the initial temperature of the melt pool. Combining the thermal model with disturbance model resulted in a nonlinear model describing melt pool evolution. The PID, a classical feedback control approach, was used to minimize the effect of intertrack disturbance on the melt pool area. The controller was tuned for the desired melt pool area in a known environment. Simulation results revealed that the proposed controller regulated the desired melt pool area during the scan of multiple tracks of a powder layer within 16 milliseconds and within a length of 0.04 mm reducing laser power by 10% approximately in five tracks. This reduced the chance of pore formation. Hence, it enhances the quality of components manufactured using the SLM process, reducing defects.

Highlights

  • Additive manufacturing (AM) of metal parts has the potential of producing complex and integrated designs with ease and the supplementary advantage of cost and weight reduction

  • To increase the fidelity of the model, a disturbance model was added to process dynamics to account for the neglected thermal interactions

  • The model was based on the energy balance of a half ellipsoidal melt pool and disturbance energy from adjacent tracks of a layer of fusion bed of the selective laser melting (SLM) process

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Additive manufacturing (AM) of metal parts has the potential of producing complex and integrated designs with ease and the supplementary advantage of cost and weight reduction. Whereas SLM is a powder bed fusion process, and the most common manipulated parameter is laser power for maintaining melt pool geometry. In this regard, very few studies are seen in the literature. This work presents the melt pool model-based feedback control of SLM process which captured the melt pool dynamics by considering the effect of heat coming from previous tracks of a layer. Simulation results of the feedback control of a melt pool cross-sectional area of SLM based on linearization of lumped parameter model of melt pool are presented.

Modelling
Analytical Lumped Parameter Model for Melt Pool Geometry
Energy Balance of Melt Pool Volume
Energy
Disturbance Model
Problem Formulation
Control Scheme
Discussion
Open Loop Simulations Results
Closed Loop Simulations Results
Case 2
Conclusions
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call