Additive manufacturing of thermal management-relevant hybrid structures
Research output: Thesis › Doctoral Thesis
Standard
2019.
Research output: Thesis › Doctoral Thesis
Harvard
APA
Author
Bibtex - Download
}
RIS (suitable for import to EndNote) - Download
TY - BOOK
T1 - Additive manufacturing of thermal management-relevant hybrid structures
AU - Wallis, Christopher
N1 - no embargo
PY - 2019
Y1 - 2019
N2 - The potential of metal additive manufacturing for producing high conductive materials and hybrid systems for thermal management in opto-, power and microelectronics has been investigated. Using the laser-based powder-bed fusion technology (L-PBF), joining and bonding of metals and metal-ceramics have been studied with a focus on the fusion zone and the interlayer, respectively. In the course of this thesis the bonding characteristics of steel/copper and AlN/Al-alloy have been assessed. Owing to residual stress evolution during L-PBF, process-induced material damage such as cracking at the binding zone was investigated and compared to residual stress simulations by which a correlation between process parameters, part geometry and the material failure could be established. A further focus in this work was placed on additive manufacturing of the thermally high conductive Cu-alloy CuCrZr. The influence of process parameters on part properties and surface quality was determined. The heat dissipation properties of conventional and additively manufactured parts were assessed and compared. For this a use case study part with microchannels was produced, whose properties were assessed by thermographic inspection, following a computational fluid dynamics simulation. Furthermore it was demonstrated that L-PBF parts feature a unique thermal history during the layer-by-layer manufacturing process, which is why CuCrZr samples in as-built state are characterized by a microstructure in non-equilibrium. In this state subsequent aging heat treatments were performed to improve material properties. In contrast to conventional manufactured Cu-alloys, a single aging process on laser-fused CuCrZr with adjusted heat treatment parameters is capable of reaching enhanced mechanical as well as thermal properties. The influence of different heat treatments on microstructure and material properties has been investigated and assessed, using SEM- and XRD-analysis.
AB - The potential of metal additive manufacturing for producing high conductive materials and hybrid systems for thermal management in opto-, power and microelectronics has been investigated. Using the laser-based powder-bed fusion technology (L-PBF), joining and bonding of metals and metal-ceramics have been studied with a focus on the fusion zone and the interlayer, respectively. In the course of this thesis the bonding characteristics of steel/copper and AlN/Al-alloy have been assessed. Owing to residual stress evolution during L-PBF, process-induced material damage such as cracking at the binding zone was investigated and compared to residual stress simulations by which a correlation between process parameters, part geometry and the material failure could be established. A further focus in this work was placed on additive manufacturing of the thermally high conductive Cu-alloy CuCrZr. The influence of process parameters on part properties and surface quality was determined. The heat dissipation properties of conventional and additively manufactured parts were assessed and compared. For this a use case study part with microchannels was produced, whose properties were assessed by thermographic inspection, following a computational fluid dynamics simulation. Furthermore it was demonstrated that L-PBF parts feature a unique thermal history during the layer-by-layer manufacturing process, which is why CuCrZr samples in as-built state are characterized by a microstructure in non-equilibrium. In this state subsequent aging heat treatments were performed to improve material properties. In contrast to conventional manufactured Cu-alloys, a single aging process on laser-fused CuCrZr with adjusted heat treatment parameters is capable of reaching enhanced mechanical as well as thermal properties. The influence of different heat treatments on microstructure and material properties has been investigated and assessed, using SEM- and XRD-analysis.
KW - Additive manufacturing
KW - Laser-powder bed fusion
KW - Hybridstrukturen
KW - Wärmemanagement
KW - Maraging Stahl
KW - Kupfer-Legierung
KW - Aluminium-Legierung
KW - Metal-Keramiken
KW - Wärmebehandlungen
KW - Mikrostruktur
KW - thermische Eigenschaften
KW - mechanische Eigenschaften
KW - Additive manufacturing
KW - Laser-powder bed fusion
KW - hybrid structures
KW - thermal managment
KW - maraging steel
KW - copper alloy
KW - aluminium alloy
KW - metal-ceramic
KW - heat treatments
KW - microstructure
KW - thermal properties
KW - mechanical properties
M3 - Doctoral Thesis
ER -