Predictive binder jet additive manufacturing enabled by clean burn-off binder design

Binder jet additive manufacturing (BJAM) presents an avenue for advanced manufacturing of various high-value materials due to high deposition rates, scalability, and geometric flexibility. However, conventional organic binders in BJAM introduce residual carbon upon pyrolysis, often leading to imprec...

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Veröffentlicht in:Additive manufacturing 2024-01, Vol.80, p.103955, Article 103955
Hauptverfasser: Gilmer, Dustin, Kim, Sungjin, Goldsby, Desarae J., Nandwana, Peeyush, Elliott, Amy, Saito, Tomonori
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Binder jet additive manufacturing (BJAM) presents an avenue for advanced manufacturing of various high-value materials due to high deposition rates, scalability, and geometric flexibility. However, conventional organic binders in BJAM introduce residual carbon upon pyrolysis, often leading to imprecise alloy composition in the final sintered part. The undesirable residual carbon from binder burn-off limits the application of BJAM for high-performance alloys due to their high sensitivity to carbon addition. In this study, we have designed poly(vinylpyrrolidone-co-vinyl acetate) (PVP-VAc) as a clean burn-off binder for BJAM, where excess oxygen groups in VAc enable cleaner burn-off and reduce residual carbon retention. Compared to a widely used commercial binder, the optimized PVP-VAc binder reduced residual carbon retention by over 90% in H13 tool steel. The significant reduction in residual carbon enables predictable printing and subsequent sintering of complex H13 tool steel geometries, an alloy known to have substantial challenges around distortion due to the sintering window shifting from carbon addition. The design of a clean burnout binder provides a major path forward for BJAM by enabling new AM designs and applications for composition-sensitive high-performance alloys, such as nickel-based superalloys, titanium alloys, and high alloyed steels.
ISSN:2214-8604
2214-7810
DOI:10.1016/j.addma.2024.103955