Engineering the Surface Melt for In-Space Manufacturing of Aluminum Parts
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
8-1-2022
Abstract
Aluminum alloys are among the top candidate materials for in-space manufacturing (ISM) due to their lightweight and relatively low melting temperature. A fundamental problem in printing metallic parts using available ISM methods, based on the fused deposition modeling (FDM) technique, is that the integrity of the final printed components is determined mainly by the adhesion between the initial particles. Engineering the surface melt can pave the way to improve the adhesion between the particles and manufacture components with higher mechanical integrity. Here, we developed a phase-field model of surface melting, where the surface energy can directly be implemented from the experimental measurements. The proposed model is adjusted to Al 7075-T6 alloy feedstocks, where the surface energy of these alloys is measured using the sessile drop method. Effect of mechanics has been included using transformation and thermal strains. The effect of elastic energy is compared here with the corresponding cases without mechanics. Two different geometric samples (cylindrical and spherical) are studied, and it is found that cylindrical particles form a more disordered structure upon size reduction compared to the spherical samples.
Publication Source (Journal or Book title)
Journal of Materials Engineering and Performance
First Page
6092
Last Page
6100
Recommended Citation
Momeni, K., Neshani, S., Uba, C., Ding, H., Raush, J., & Guo, S. (2022). Engineering the Surface Melt for In-Space Manufacturing of Aluminum Parts. Journal of Materials Engineering and Performance, 31 (8), 6092-6100. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11665-022-07054-2