| Literature DB >> 35806604 |
Natago Guilé Mbodj1, Mohammad Abuabiah1,2, Peter Plapper1, Maxime El Kandaoui3, Slah Yaacoubi3.
Abstract
Laser Wire Additive Manufacturing (LWAM) is a flexible and fast manufacturing method used to produce variants of high metal geometric complexity. In this work, a physics-based model of the bead geometry including process parameters and material properties was developed for the LWAM process of large-scale products. The developed model aimed to include critical process parameters, material properties and thermal history to describe the relationship between the layer height with different process inputs (i.e., the power, the standoff distance, the temperature, the wire-feed rate, and the travel speed). Then, a Model Predictive Controller (MPC) was designed to keep the layer height trajectory constant taking into consideration the constraints faced in the LWAM technology. Experimental validation results were performed to check the accuracy of the proposed model and the results revealed that the developed model matches the experimental data. Finally, the designed MPC controller was able to track a predefined layer height reference signal by controlling the temperature input of the system.Entities:
Keywords: Laser Wire Additive Manufacturing; Model Predictive Controller; physics-based model
Year: 2022 PMID: 35806604 PMCID: PMC9267124 DOI: 10.3390/ma15134479
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Materials (Basel) ISSN: 1996-1944 Impact factor: 3.748
Figure 1Schematic diagram for bead deposition process in the LWAM.
Figure 2Half-ellipsoidal form of the bead geometry.
Figure 3Standoff distance set-up.
Figure 4Rosenthal’s solution applied to the LWAM process.
Figure 5MPC schematic diagram for the layer height control in the LWAM process.
Figure 6Experimental Setup of LWAM platform at Institut de Soudure.
Figure 7Profilometer set-up for data acquisition.
Process parameters for the two deposited cylinders.
| Power (W) | Travel Speed (m/min) | Wire Feed Rate (m/min) | Standoff Distance (mm) | Number of Layers | Layer Thickness (mm) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cylinder 1 | 2700 | 2.0 | 2.4 | 1.5 | 9 | 0.7 |
| Cylinder 2 | 2100 | 0.6 | 2.1 | 1.5 | 8 | 1.2 |
Process variables and material properties of Inconel 718.
| Symbols | Parameters Name | Parameters Value | Sources | Units |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Gain | Variable | Experiments | Unitless |
|
| Power | Variable | Experiments | W |
|
| Melt specific heat | 760–800 | [ | J/(kg K) |
|
| Melting temperature | 1570 | [ | K |
|
| Temperature of the preceeding layer | Variable | Experiments | K |
|
| Absorptivity of the melt pool | 0.5 | [ | Unitless |
|
| Focal length of the objective lens | 160 × 10−3 | laser beam is focess | m |
|
| Melt pool width | Variable | Experiments | m |
|
| Proportion of laser power | 0.7 | [ | Unitless |
|
| Thermal conductivity | 33 | [ | W/m·K |
|
| Height of the product | Variable | Experiments | m |
|
| Laser beam diameter of the laser | 3.95 × 10−3 | Relative to the printed head | m |
|
| Standoff distance | Variable | Experiments |
|
|
| Travel speed of the robot | Variable | Experiments | m/s |
|
| Layer thickness | Variable | Experiments | m |
|
| Thermal diffusivity |
| [ | m2/s |
|
| Melt pool density | Variable | material | kg/m3 |
|
| Width over height ratio | Variable | Experiments | Unitless |
|
| Melt pool height | Output | Calculated using the model | m |
Summary of the definition of the parameters.
| Parameter | Definition |
|---|---|
|
| Constant gain |
|
| Input laser power |
|
| Quantity of heat needed to increase the temperature 1 K per unit mass (kg) |
|
| Melting temperature of the material |
|
| Temperature of the layer where a new deposition will be done |
|
| The degree to which the material absorbs the laser power |
|
| The distance from the last lens to the point at which the laser beam is focussed |
|
| The measured width of a deposited bead |
|
| Reflected laser power from the material wire |
|
| The rate at which the heat is transferred by conduction through a unit cross-section area of material |
|
| Total height of the part to be produced |
|
| The diameter of the focuses laser beam |
|
| Distance from the substrate to the nozzle tip |
|
| Deposition speed |
|
| Theoretical layer thickness |
|
| The ability of the material to conduct thermal energy thermal energy |
|
| Density of the material - the mass of a unit volume of the material |
|
| The ratio of the width to the height |
|
| Height of the deposited beads |
Figure 8Temperature profile of cylinder 1 and cylinder 2.
Figure 9Model validation for cylinder 1.
Figure 10Model validation for cylinder 2.
Parameters values used for MPC controller testing.
| Parameter | Value | Parameter | Value | Parameter | Value |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| 0.15 |
| 1.5 × 10−3 (m) |
| 0.7 (m) |
|
| 800 (J/(kg K) |
| 1570 (K) |
| 273 (K) |
|
| 160 × 10−3 (m) |
| 2.8 × 10−3 (m) |
| 0.7 |
|
| 2.33 × 10−3 (m) |
| 33 (W/m·K) |
| 8145 (kg/m3) |
|
| 12 × 10−3 (m) |
| 5.0 × 10−6 (m2/s) |
| 0.5 (m) |
MPC parameters for layer height control.
| MPC Parameter | Min Value | Value | Max Value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sampling time ( | - | 0.1 | - |
| Prediction horizon ( | - | 15 | - |
| Control horizon ( | - | 3 | - |
| Input constraint (K) | 273 | - | 1450 |
| Output constraint (mm) | 0.75 | - | 0.9 |
| Input weight | - | 0 | - |
| Output weight (mm) | - | 5 | - |
Figure 11Step response of the closed-loop feedback system.
Figure 12Controlled input temperature.