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Explore the world of design and learn how to create visually stunning artwork.

Learning Objectives

By the end of this section, students will be able to:

During the early 2000s, engineers were continually inventing new AM machines and technologies. With each new development, they brought forth a new process with specific advantages and disadvantages in relation to others that already existed. These new AM technologies required different types of energy sources, feedstocks, and material types, and it soon became confusing for people – even those with deep expertise and experience – to understand exactly what type of AM was being discussed.

To solve this confusion, in 2012, the American Society for Testing and Materials (ASTM) F42 committee defined seven categories of AM processes, as follows:

By grouping AM technologies into seven different types, it became easier for people to understand exactly what type of AM technology was being described. However, the development of process variants and hybrid AM processes began to accelerate at an unprecedented pace. By 2019, processes were being created that did not fit neatly into the seven categories.

To maintain the classification method and develop a more logical way to differentiate between the technologies, experts began looking at the AM process itself in combination with the subfunctions are used to create a part. Specifically, how each Layer is created, where or how the Material feedstock is added to the layer and what Energy source is used during the process.

Additional post-processing and, sometime, Densification steps, described below, may also be required for some processes. Table 2.1 defines the options for each of these technologies and how often they are required.

Remove Supports or SubstrateSubtractive process for DimensionsProcess for Surface FinishProcess for Material DensityHeat Treat/Cure for Material Performance
Vat PhotopolymerizationVery oftenRareSometimesRareSometimes
Material ExtrusionVery oftenSometimesSometimesRareRare
Power Bed FusionVery oftenSometimesSometimesRareVery often
Directed Energy DepositionSometimesSometimesSometimesRareVery often
Material JettingVery oftenRareSometimesSometimesRare
Binder JettingRareSometimesSometimesSometimesVery often
Sheet LaminationVery oftenSometimesRareRareRare

Table 2.1 Overview of downstream processing requirements for each AM process (Original data compiled by TBGT).

For example, the Material Extrusion process is characterized by: a) wire material feedstock commonly known as filament, b) mechanical fusion from a nozzle, using c) liquification as the means to push the feedstock through the nozzle, resulting in a d) fully dense part. By deconstructing AM processes into three distinct subfunctions of material, layers, and energy sources, and an optional fourth, densification when required, an unlimited number of AM processes can be mapped that stretch beyond the limits of the limited ASTM process definitions.

Energy Source

The energy source subfunction describes how the AM process initiates to create a chain of events that produces AM hardware. Using thermal energy and/or pressure overcomes the material flow stress to change the physical characteristics of the material feedstock. This can be accomplished using a number of different technologies, these include:

Material Feedstock

Material feedstock is defined as the raw material form factor that is used at the beginning of the AM process, that is ultimately, physically transformed by the energy source. These may be in the forms of the following:

A small container of powder next to a small puddle of a metallic liquid.

Figure 2.2 Additive manufacturing process materials come in many forms, including powder and liquid. (credit: Modification of “Additive manufacturing process material” by Oak Ridge National Laboratory/Flickr, CC BY 2.0)

Layer Creation

Once the raw material is physically transformed into the AM processing material form factor, new layers are created during the AM process fabrication. As such, the layer is created with the energy and material coming together at a focused point. The following are ways that AM layers are formed:

For some of the layer creation method, a material other than the feedstock can be applied. For example, a low-melting polymer powder used to fuse sheet materials together, an agent that increases the feedstock’s ability to absorb energy and fuse, or that prevents fusion for control of features.

Full Densification

Though not a strict definition, full densification is an aggregate of each layer creating hardware that results in a structure which is greater than 99.5% dense directly from the machine without post-processing steps being necessary. These post-processing steps would include other non-AM related processes such as sintering, ultraviolet curing, etc. In the densification sub function, it is a binary decision. Will the part that is removed from the AM machine exhibit 99.5% microstructural density or not?