LAM 2016

An In-depth Look at Additive Manufacturing’s Challenges & Successes

By Betsy Marone

The eigth year of Laser Institute of America’s Laser Additive Manufacturing (LAM®) Workshop brought together over 170 attendees from 14 countries. The successful event gathered these individuals – over half of whom attended for the first time – who are involved in the manufacturing of complex, lightweight, metal and various other structural materials. From 3D printing and cladding to rapid manufacturing and sintering, presentations covered a plethora of revolutionary Additive Manufacturing (AM) methods that continued the workshop’s tradition of building enthusiasm in the industry.

The event, which was held at the Embassy Suites in Orlando, FL from March 2-3, featured numerous speakers from key companies involved in the industry. Presenters hailed from companies including Keystone Synergistic Enterprises, Inc., Fabrisonic LLC, Rolls Royce and General Electric as well as universities around the world who are making important advances in additive manufacturing. Continue reading

Industrial Lasers Focus on Key Markets

By David A. Belforte

We have all breathed a sigh of relief that the deep recession of 2008/09 is over and that industry has recovered. In the words of one industry association, “the sense of imminent financial contagion has ‘dialed down’ and world economies have drawn back from the brink.” Reality is that aggregate GDP growth in industrialized countries (non-US) is sluggish, and growth in the emerging markets which has accelerated through end of 2013 is expected to decelerate in 2014. This weak global growth translated to a weak outlook for US exports in 2013, but will be rising in 2014. So it is remarkable that in this less than ebullient global economy, manufacturing, specifically that manufacturing that utilizes industrial laser material processing technology, continued to expand in 2013, albeit at a modest pace. Continue reading

Digital Photonic Production and Its Emerging Opportunities

By Christian Hinke

Digital photonic production enables us to fabricate almost any component or product directly from digital data. Experts characterize the photon or the laser as the only tool that “works” as quickly as a computer “thinks.” An office laser printer functions according to this principle and reveals what will be possible in future manufacturing with high energy lasers – when the fundamental interactions between material, light and photonic process chains have been understood and, based on this knowledge, digital photonic production systems have been put into practice. Continue reading

LME 2013 Showcases Laser-Based Manufacturing for Big Bottom-Line Benefits

By Geoff Giordano

In its third year, the Laser Institute of America’s Lasers for Manufacturing Event® (LME®) has been established as an indispensable locus of advanced photonics knowledge, with industry experts, seasoned practitioners and enthusiastic entrants to the field converging to share insights into the 21st century production revolution. Continue reading

Statistical Analysis of Low Porosity Laser Welding of Ti Alloys using a Directed Gas Jet

By:  Jon Blackburn1, Chris Allen2, Paul Hilton2, Lin Li1

1 Laser Processing Research Centre, The University of Manchester, Manchester, M60 1QD, UK

2TWI Ltd, Granta Park, Abington, Cambridge, CB21 6AL, UK

The properties of titanium alloys are ideal for the service requirements of many aerospace applications. Recent fiscal and environmental pressures are stimulating the demand for lighter, more fuel efficient aircraft in the commercial aerospace industry. A direct result of this is an increase in the utilisation of titanium alloys, and the demand for titanium products is predicted to more than double over the next six years. Current manufacturing methods used to produce titanium components for the aerospace industry, such as forging, casting and machining, have buy-to-fly ratios as high as 20:1 and reduce the economic benefit of utilising titanium alloys because of their relatively high cost when compared to aluminium alloys and structural steels. This ratio can be reduced significantly by using a welding process to manufacture near net shape components.

Keyhole laser welding is a high-energy density process that produces deep penetration with a relatively low heat input. Compared to electron beam and friction welding, it is a relatively flexible process as it can be performed out of vacuum and the near infra-red laser beams of modern solid-state lasers can be easily delivered through an optical fibre. However, the formation of porosity in the weld metal is of concern when laser keyhole welding, and can occur when soluble gases dissolved in the weldpool, such as hydrogen, are rejected upon weld solidification, and when insoluble gases and/or metal vapour become trapped in the weldpool and there is insufficient time for the gas to escape before solidification. The weld quality criteria required for welded aerospace components are known to be particularly stringent and the porosity volume fraction in the weld metal is of primary concern, if welds are machined, as any consequently surface breaking pores can then act as initiators for fatigue cracks and significantly reduce the fatigue resistance of the welded joint.

Experimental work has been performed using a fibre delivered Nd:YAG laser beam to weld 3.25mm thickness Ti-6Al-4V and Ti-2.5Cu. It was observed that directing a jet of argon gas near the laser-material interaction point could significantly reduce the porosity in the weld metal. The optimum process parameters of the directed argon jet, with regards to minimising the internal porosity content and achieving an acceptable weld profile, were determined using two statistically designed and analysed sets of experiments. Several full-penetration, butt welds were produced in the titanium alloys that had internal porosity contents much lower than those stipulated in the most stringent aerospace welding standards. The directed gas jet also eliminated the undercut at the face and root of the weld. High speed imaging and spectroscopic analysis of the welding process have shown that, once correctly set-up, the directed inert gas jet disperses the formation of excited metal vapour above the keyhole and also significantly changes the hydrodynamic behaviour of the weld pool.

Figure 1: Ti-2.5Cu butt welds made without (left) and with (right) an optimised directed argon gas jet.

The above brief overview was extracted from its original abstract and paper presented at The International Congress on Applications of Lasers & Electro-Optics (ICALEO) in Orlando, FL. To order a copy of the complete proceedings from this conference click here