Additive Manufacturing Metals
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How metal 3D printing technologies work, which alloys are printable, and the post-processing steps needed to turn raw AM parts into production-quality components.
Metal 3D Printing Technologies: PBF, DED, and Binder Jetting
Metal additive manufacturing encompasses several fundamentally different process families. Powder Bed Fusion, Directed Energy Deposition, and Binder Jetting each produce metal parts through distinct mechanisms with different strengths, limitations, and cost structures.
Printable Alloys: Which Metals Work in AM?
Not every alloy that works in casting or wrought processing can be additively manufactured. Printability depends on how an alloy responds to the rapid melting and solidification cycles unique to AM, and some widely used alloys are notoriously difficult to print.
Powder Characteristics and Their Effect on Part Quality
Metal powder is the raw material for most additive manufacturing processes. Its particle size distribution, morphology, chemistry, and flowability directly determine the density, surface finish, and mechanical properties of the finished part.
Post-Processing AM Parts: HIP, Machining, and Surface Finishing
As-built metal AM parts rarely meet final specifications. Post-processing steps including stress relief, hot isostatic pressing, machining, and surface treatments transform raw builds into production-quality components.
Design for Additive Manufacturing: Lattices, Topology, and Supports
Additive manufacturing unlocks geometries impossible by conventional methods, but exploiting this freedom requires rethinking design from first principles. Topology optimization, lattice structures, and support-aware orientation decisions separate effective AM design from simple shape replication.
Qualification and Certification of AM Components
Putting metal AM parts into service in aerospace, medical, nuclear, or other regulated industries requires rigorous qualification that demonstrates the process produces consistent, reliable components. This guide covers the standards, testing, and quality frameworks involved.
Cost Analysis: When Does Metal AM Make Sense?
Metal AM is expensive per kilogram compared to casting or machining from bar stock. But cost per kilogram is the wrong metric. AM becomes competitive when evaluated on total delivered cost including tooling, lead time, material waste, and part consolidation.