Influence of laser sintering parameters on mechanical properties of polymer products.
Pilipovic, Ana ; Valentan, Bogdan ; Brajlih, Tomaz 等
1. INTRODUCTION
The rapid prototyping (RP) procedures may drastically reduce the
time and costs necessary to make a new product from the original concept
to the production. RP can help in identifying the basic faults that are
expensive to be corrected later, if they are identified when the product
is ready for mass production. There are also many restrictions,
primarily in the number of available materials and their properties
which may differ quite considerably from the properties of the end-user
products' materials.
2. SELECTIVE LASER SINTERING--SLS
SLS is one of the most important prototyping procedures. In polymer
processing the entire procedure is carried out in a heated chamber
filled with inert gas, in order to avoid potential combustion of the
powder material particles. (Godec, 2005) The layer of powder is scanned
and heated with thermal energy of the laser beam, resulting in mutual
sintering of the material particles. The platform is lowered for the
thickness of one layer which permits laying of a new powder layer. The
new layer is scanned, adapted to the next upper cross-section and
adheres to the previous layer. (Gibson et al., 2010) Prototypes made by
SLS technology are increasingly used as functional parts that require
good mechanical properties. This requirement depends on many factors:
accuracy of the CAD model, method of layer slicing, machine resolution,
beam offset, layer thickness, material shrinkage, laser speed, laser
power, energy density, working base temperature, and hatching distance.
The energy density that affects the visual appearance of the product and
the very mechanical properties is calculated according to the equation:
(Raghunath & Pandey, 2007; Senthilkumaran et al., 2009; Berce et
al., 2008; Caulfield et al., 2007)
ED = P/v x h * x (1)
where is: ED [J/[mm.sup.2]]--energy density, P [W]--laser power, v
[mm/s]--laser speed, h [mm]--hatch distance, x [mm]--beam overlay ratio:
x = d/h (2)
where is: d [mm]--diameter of the focussed beam.
3. EXPERIMENTAL RESULTS
In the experimental part the attempt was made to determine the
influence of laser speed and power, i.e. energy density on the tensile
and flexural properties of test parts. The tensile properties are
determined on the tester according to the ISO 527:1993 standard, and the
flexural properties according to the ISO 178:2001 standard. The test
specimens are made of PA2200 material using the Formiga P100 SLS machine
of the EOS Company. Hatching distance was set at h = 0.25 mm and d =
0.42 mm.
When the energy density is the same, and the parameters of power
and speed are changed, the mechanical properties remain the same, which
leads to the conclusion that the material properties are only affected
by the changes in energy input (Tab. 1, Fig. 1 and 2).
[FIGURE 1 OMITTED]
[FIGURE 2 OMITTED]
Table 2 provides the manufacturing parameters with different energy
input. Fig. 3 presents the tensile, and Fig. 4 flexural properties of
the material.
[FIGURE 3 OMITTED]
[FIGURE 4 OMITTED]
From the diagram it can be noticed that the greater the energy
input is, the greater are the mechanical properties of test parts.
However, it may be noticed also that in case of excessive energy input
0.148 J/[mm.sup.2] (test sample no. 6) the properties are reduced, which
is a consequence of material overheating.
4. INFLUENCE OF THE LAYER THICKNESS
Since the manufacturing speed depends also on the layer thickness,
due to faster production the layer thickness was increased from 0.1 mm
to 0.2 mm and the analysis has shown that all the properties (hardness
H, tensile stress [R.sub.m], tensile stress at break [R.sub.p] and
tensile strain at break [[epsilon].sub.p]) are reduced by about a half
(Fig. 5). Such material behaviour is caused by too little input energy
for good joining of thicker layers (Fig. 6.a and 6.b).
[FIGURE 5 OMITTED]
[FIGURE 6 OMITTED]
4. CONCLUSION
By setting different laser speeds and powers the properties remain
unchanged, provided the energy density remains the same. However, by
increasing the energy input the mechanical properties increase. It is
also noticed that the energy input must not be too high, since then the
properties decrease, and it may be concluded that the optimal energy for
the production of products on EOS Formiga P100 machine would be around
0.05 J/[mm.sup.2]. However, if all this were compared to the change in
the layer thickness, one can notice that the layer thickness must be as
thin as possible, because with thicker layers higher energy input is
required, otherwise the properties decrease.
5. ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
These materials are based on work financed by the National
Foundation for Science, Higher Education and Technological Development
of the Republic of Croatia and is part of the research included in the
projects Increasing Efficiency in Polymeric Products and Processing
Development supported by the Ministry of Science, Education and Sports
of the Republic of Croatia and FP7 project Knowledge Based Process
Planning and Design for Additive Layer Manufacturing (KARMA), founded by
the European Commission.
6. REFERENCES
Berce, P., Pacurar, R., Bale, N. & Paclisan, D. (2008): SLS
parameters optimization using the Taguchi method, The 2nd International
Conference on Additive Technologies; DAAAM Specialized Conference, Ptuj,
Slovenia, September, 17th--18th, ISBN: 390150961-5
Caulfield, B., McHugh, P.E. & Lohfeld, S. (2007): Dependence of
mechanical properties of polyamide components on build parameters in the
SLS process, Journal of Materials Processing Technology 182 (2007)
477-488, ISSN: 0924-0136
Gibson, I., Rosen, D.W. & Stucker, B. (2010): Additive
Manufacturing Technologies: Rapid Prototyping to Direct Digital
Manufacturing, Springer, ISBN: 978-1-4419-11193, USA
Godec, D. (2005). The influence of hybrid mould on thermoplastic moulded part properties, D. Sc. Thesis, Faculty of Mechanical
Engineering and Naval Architecture, Zagreb, UDK: 621.7, 678.027.7
Raghunath, N. & Pandey, P.M.: Improving accuracy through
shrinkage modelling by using Taguchi method in selective laser
sintering, International Journal of Machine Tools & Manufacture 47
(2007) 985-995, ISSN: 0890-6955
Senthilkumaran, K., Pandey, P.M. & Rao, P.V.M.: Influence of
building strategies on the accuracy of parts in selective laser
sintering, Materials and Design 30 (2009) 2946-2954, ISSN: 0261-3069
Tab. 1. Build parameters
energy density,
Run power, W speed, mm/s J/[mm.sup.2]
1 15 2000 0.05
2 25 3333 0.05
3 7.5 1000 0.05
4 22.5 3000 0.05
Tab. 2. Build parameters
energy density,
Run power, W speed, mm/s J/[mm.sup.2]
1 7 3000 0.016
2 10.5 3000 0.024
3 14 3000 0.031
4 18 3000 0.040
5 21 3000 0.047
6 22 1000 0.148
7 22 3000 0.049
8 22.5 3000 0.050
9 25 3000 0.056