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Mechanical Engineering Commons

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Brigham Young University

Other Mechanical Engineering

Laser sintering

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Full-Text Articles in Mechanical Engineering

Impact Of Sintering Time And Temperature On Mechanical Properties In Projection Sintering Of Polyamide-12, Justin Nussbaum, Taranjot Kaur, Julie Harmon, Nathan B. Crane Oct 2020

Impact Of Sintering Time And Temperature On Mechanical Properties In Projection Sintering Of Polyamide-12, Justin Nussbaum, Taranjot Kaur, Julie Harmon, Nathan B. Crane

Faculty Publications

In powder bed fusion additive manufacturing (AM), the fusing process is temperature and time dependent. However, little work has been done to understand how different processing temperatures and times might impact the mechanical properties at longer sintering times than are typical in laser sintering (LS) systems. Prior results with projection sintering have shown that heating for longer times (>1s) improves part toughness compared to laser sintering. In this work, Large Area Projection Sintering (LAPS) is used to sinter entire layers of material simultaneously over the course of a few seconds with spatial control of layer temperature. This work evaluates …


Impact Of Extended Sintering Times On Mechanical Properties In Pa-12 Parts Produced By Powderbed Fusion Processes, Garrett Craft, Justin Nussbaum, Nathan B. Crane, J. P. Harmon Aug 2018

Impact Of Extended Sintering Times On Mechanical Properties In Pa-12 Parts Produced By Powderbed Fusion Processes, Garrett Craft, Justin Nussbaum, Nathan B. Crane, J. P. Harmon

Faculty Publications

Additive Manufacturing provides many advantages in reduced lead times and increased geometric freedom compared to traditional manufacturing methods, but material properties are often reduced. This paper considers powder bed fusion of polyamide 12 (PA12, Nylon 12) produced by three different processes: laser sintering (LS), multijet fusion (MJF)/high speed sintering (HSS), and large area projection sintering (LAPS). While all utilize similar PA12 materials, they are found to differ significantly in mechanical properties especially in elongation to break. The slower heating methods (MJF/HSS and LAPS) produce large elongation at break with the LAPS process showing 10x elongation and MJF/HSS exhibiting 2.5x the …