Abstract

Shielding gas flow is essential to the additive manufacturing (AM) process, and the effects of argon shielding gas flow variation on the macroscopic homogeneity of additive manufactured stainless steel parts have been studied using an open-architecture AM system. Such a variation manifests itself layer-by-layer within one part and part-by-part across the build plate. Within one build, a combination of balling behavior, conduction melting and keyhole melting is observed across the build plate using the same laser parameters. Quantitative characterization of the melt pool shapes show that the melt pool width and the penetration depth exhibit the largest variations. Possible relations between the gas flow condition and macroscopic structure variations are discussed and guidelines for improved design of a gas flow system as well as future research directions are suggested for achieving macroscopically uniform metal AM.

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