Fused Filament Fabrication for the production of metal and/or ceramic parts and feedstocks therefore
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19th Plansee Seminar. Band 19 Reutte, Austria: Plansee AG, 2017.
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TY - GEN
T1 - Fused Filament Fabrication for the production of metal and/or ceramic parts and feedstocks therefore
AU - Kukla, Christian
AU - Gonzalez-Gutierrez, Joamin
AU - Cano Cano, Santiago
AU - Burkhardt, Carlo
AU - Hampel, Stefan
AU - Moritz, Tassilo
AU - Holzer, Clemens
PY - 2017/5/29
Y1 - 2017/5/29
N2 - Fused Filament Fabrication (FFF), also known under Stratasys’ trademark name Fused Deposition Modelling (FDM), is a widely used thermoplastic-based additive manufacturing method for polymer parts. FFF could be used to shape parts with Powder Injection Moulding (PIM) feedstocks instead of/ or in addition to injection moulding and after debinding and sintering to obtain solid parts with complex geometry. Currently used PIM feedstocks do not necessarily meet the requirements of the majority of FFF machines available in the market, which rely on the use of flexible filaments.In this paper, the specific properties needed by the FFF feedstock materials are discussed. Different feedstocks with powders of 316L, NdFeB , titanium, strontium ferrite and zirconia powders were characterised ( mechanical properties) and tested regarding printability using a conventional FFF machine. Therefrom the most important requirements for printable PIM feedstocks are deduced.Additionally an overview of the state-of-the-art of the equipment, respective processing parameters and examples for currently achieved sinter shrinkage; densities and other mechanical properties as well as achievable surface quality are given.
AB - Fused Filament Fabrication (FFF), also known under Stratasys’ trademark name Fused Deposition Modelling (FDM), is a widely used thermoplastic-based additive manufacturing method for polymer parts. FFF could be used to shape parts with Powder Injection Moulding (PIM) feedstocks instead of/ or in addition to injection moulding and after debinding and sintering to obtain solid parts with complex geometry. Currently used PIM feedstocks do not necessarily meet the requirements of the majority of FFF machines available in the market, which rely on the use of flexible filaments.In this paper, the specific properties needed by the FFF feedstock materials are discussed. Different feedstocks with powders of 316L, NdFeB , titanium, strontium ferrite and zirconia powders were characterised ( mechanical properties) and tested regarding printability using a conventional FFF machine. Therefrom the most important requirements for printable PIM feedstocks are deduced.Additionally an overview of the state-of-the-art of the equipment, respective processing parameters and examples for currently achieved sinter shrinkage; densities and other mechanical properties as well as achievable surface quality are given.
KW - Additive manufacturing
KW - Fused Filament Fabrication
KW - metals
KW - ceramics
KW - Sintering
KW - debinding
M3 - Conference contribution
VL - 19
BT - 19th Plansee Seminar
PB - Plansee AG
CY - Reutte, Austria
T2 - 19th Plansee Seminar
Y2 - 28 May 2017 through 2 June 2017
ER -