Effect of Surface Finish and Post-Processing on the Fatigue Life of Additively Manufacturing Parts
Navy SBIR 2018.2 - Topic N182-126 ONR - Ms. Lore-Anne Ponirakis - [email protected] Opens: May 22, 2018 - Closes: June 20, 2018 (8:00 PM ET)
TECHNOLOGY AREA(S):
Materials/Processes ACQUISITION PROGRAM: Quality
Metal Additive Manufacturing (QUALITY MADE) OBJECTIVE: Develop a surface
finishing process that can efficiently post-process additively manufactured
metallic components to a consistent finish while enhancing material properties
and part performance. DESCRIPTION: Metal additive
manufacturing (AM) is increasingly being considered for use on Marine Corps
platforms and for parts with increasing complexity, strength, and performance
requirements. The 3-dimensional layered construction, variations in powder bed
heights across the bed, and other factors like the Marangoni effect due to
surface tension gradients may cause marked surface roughness, which affects the
resulting part performance [Ref 1]. Additionally, AM processes allow designers
to break free from traditional design constraints and optimize the part
topology, leading to parts with less material and greater complexity. The wider
adoption of AM may be limited by the surface finish being produced by the
various AM techniques and the extent of post-processing required after
fabrication. The ability to control the surface finish is a function of the AM
technique used, the manufacturing process parameters, material, geometry of the
part, direction the part is oriented during the build, and the post-processing
techniques utilized. PHASE I: Report on the
fatigue life and impact of surface finishing on additively manufactured alloys
of interest to the Navy / Marine Corps (e.g., Al alloys, Ti-6Al-4V, 316L).
Develop concepts for a new post-processing technology on AM surface finishes
and fatigue life. Demonstrate the technical feasibility of a process to
reliably deliver a uniform surface finish on AM components. During Phase I, ONR
will provide exemplar 3D models and/or parts to guide Phase II development.
Develop a Phase II plan. PHASE II: Based on Phase I
results and guidance in preparation for Phase II, mature proposed
post-processing technologies for AM alloy parts of interest to the Navy /
Marine Corps manufactured using powder bed fusion and/or directed energy
deposition techniques. Using a design of experiments approach for exemplar
technology optimized parts [Ref 8], collect sufficient experimental results to
develop an empirical model and UQ that can predict fatigue life based on
post-processing surface treatment and mechanical loading. PHASE III DUAL USE
APPLICATIONS: Support the Marine Corps and Navy in transitioning the technology
for use in intermediate- and depot-level maintenance to deliver required
surface finish features. Mature and support a rapid process to assist in the
qualification and certification of additively manufactured parts through
understanding and UQ of reliability frameworks. Simultaneously explore the
numerous dual use applications requiring surface finishing for AM in industries
such as aerospace, automobile manufacturing, medical implants, and weapon
manufacturing. REFERENCES: 1. Townsend, A., Senin, N.,
Blunt, L., Leach, R.K., Taylor, J.S.� Surface texture metrology for metal
additive manufacturing: a review, 2. Sames, W. J., List, F. A.,
Pannala, S., Dehoff, R. R., & Babu, S. S. The metallurgy and processing
science of metal additive manufacturing. International Materials Reviews, 61,
March 7, 2016, pp. 315-360, 3. Bagehorn, S., Wehr, J.,
& Maier, H. J.� Application of mechanical surface finishing processes for
roughness reduction and fatigue improvement of additively manufactured
Ti-6Al-4V parts. International Journal of Fatigue, 102, September 01, 2017, pp.
135-142. http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0142112317302153 4. Ma, C., Andani, M. T.,
Qin, H., Moghaddam, N. S., Ibrahim, H., Jahadakbar, A., Amerinatanzi, A., ...
Ye, C. Improving surface finish and wear resistance of additive manufactured
nickel-titanium by ultrasonic nano-crystal surface modification. Journal of
Materials Processing Technology, 249, November 01, 2017, pp. 433-440. 5. Mohammadian, N., Turenne,
S., & Brailovski, V.. Surface finish control of additively-manufactured
Inconel 625 components using combined chemical-abrasive flow polishing. Journal
of Materials Processing Tech, 252, February 01, 2018, pp. 728-738. https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0924013617304697 6. Alfieri, V., Argenio, P.,
Caiazzo, F., & Sergi, V. Reduction of surface roughness by means of laser
processing over additive manufacturing metal parts. Materials, 10(1), January
2017, 30. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5344551/ 7. Townsend, A., Senin, N.,
Blunt, L., Leach, R. K., & Taylor, J. S. Surface texture metrology for
metal additive manufacturing: a review. Precision Engineering, 46, October
2016, pp. 34-47. https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0141635916300721 8. Example topology optimized
part, http://www.insidemetaladditivemanufacturing.com/blog/design-for-slm-topology-optimisation-of-metallic-structural-nodes-in-architecture-applications,
Accessed February 2018 9. ASTM E466-15, Standard
Practice for Conducting Force Controlled Constant Amplitude Axial Fatigue Tests
of Metallic Materials, ASTM International, West Conshohocken, PA, 2015, https://www.astm.org/Standards/E466.htm KEYWORDS: Additive
Manufacturing; AM; Surface Finish; Post-processing; 3D Printing; Material
Science; Metallurgy
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