SUPPLY
PHASE
PROCESS
LAYER
CREATION
TECHNIQUE
Liquid layer curing
PHASE CHANGE
TYPE
MATERIALS
Liquid
Stereolithography
Photopolymerization
Liquid layer curing and milling
Extrusion of melted plastic
Photopolymerization
Photopolymers
(acrylates,
epoxies, colorable resins, filled resins)
Photopolymers
Ballistic particle manufacturing Three-dimensional printing Droplet deposition
Solidification by cooling No phase change
Selective laser sintering Layer of powder
Laser driven sintering or melting
Laminated object manufacturing Deposition of sheet material
No phase change
Solid base curing
Fused deposition modeling (FDM)
Powder
Solid
Binder droplet deposition onto powder layer
Solidification by cooling Thermoplastics
(ABS,
polycarbonate, elastomer) and wax Polymers, wax
Ceramic,
polymer and metal powder with binder
Polymers, metals with binder, metals, ceramics and sand with binder Paper, polymers
TABLE 10.6 Characteristics of Rapid Prototyping Processes.
Manufacturing Processes for Engineering Materials, 4th ed.
Kalpakjian • Schmid
Prentice Hall, 2003
Stereolithography
FIGURE 10.41 Schematic illustration of the stereolithography process. Source: Courtesy of
A.S. Alpert, 3D Sytems.
Manufacturing Processes for Engineering Materials, 4th ed.
Kalpakjian • Schmid
Prentice Hall, 2003
Production of a
Stereolithography
File
FIGURE 10.40 The computational steps in producing a stereolithography file. (a) Threedimensional decription of the part. (b) The part is divided into slices.
(Only 1 in 10 is shown.) (c)
Support material is planned. (d)
A set of tool directions is determined for manufacturing each slice. Shown is the extruder path at section A–A from (c), for a fuseddeposition modeling operation.
Manufacturing Processes for Engineering Materials, 4th ed.
Kalpakjian • Schmid
Prentice Hall, 2003
Solid-Base Curing
Figure 19.8 Schematic illustration of the solid-base-curing process. Source: After M. Burns,
Automated Fabrication, Prentice Hall, 1993.
Kalpakjian • Schmid
Manufacturing Engineering and Technology
© 2001 Prentice-Hall
Page 19-10
Fused
Deposition
Modeling
FIGURE 10.42 Schematic illustration of the fused-deposition modeling process. Source: Courtesy of Stratasys, Inc.
Manufacturing Processes for Engineering Materials, 4th ed.
Kalpakjian • Schmid
Prentice Hall, 2003
Support Structures in Rapid Prototyping
FIGURE 10.43 (a) A part with a protruding section that requires support material. (b)
Common support structures used in rapidprototyping machines. Source: Figure