posted on 2008-06-03, 10:30authored byNeil Hopkinson, Tim B. Sercombe
Purpose - This paper investigates the accuracy and repeatability of the indirect selective laser sintering of aluminium process.
Design/Methodology/Approach – In this paper we characterised the shrinkage of indirect SLS aluminium parts during the various stages of production. Standard scale parts were measured using a Giddings and Lewis co-ordinate measuring machine in both the green and infiltrated condition.
Findings – The conducted experiments show that the most accuracy is lost during furnace cycle and that the greatest loss of accuracy occurred in the Z dimensions. Additionally the position of parts within the part bed in both X, Y and Z is shown to influence accuracy, with smaller parts being built closer to the edge of the bed later in the build. These results have been interpreted as being a result of the phenomenon of “Z-growth”. Finally the research shows that the overall accuracy of the indirect selective laser sintering of aluminium process is comparable with many existing processes such as investment casting.
Originality/Value – Before any new material can be accepted, there is a need to not only fully characterise the dimensional accuracy attainable, but gain a though understanding of the processes that contribute to the inaccuracies. This paper addresses this need.
History
School
Mechanical, Electrical and Manufacturing Engineering
Citation
HOPKINSON, N. and SERCOMBE, T.B., 2008. Process repeatability and sources of error in indirect SLS of aluminium. Rapid prototyping journal, 14 (2), pp. 108-113