Analysis of salts for use as support structure in metal material jetting

Benedikt Kirchebner, Christoph Rehekampff, Martin Tröndle, Philipp Lechner, Wolfram Volk

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

7 Scopus citations

Abstract

Material jetting (MJT) is a category of additive manufacturing processes where the build material is deposited in the form of individual droplets. MJT has recently been expanded into the field of metal processing due to a potentially high printing speed at low equipment and raw material cost. For full 3D capability, support structures are needed that have to be removed after the print job. We examine water soluble salts and suitable nozzle materials to realise the printing of molten salt in a MJT process. Here, the wetting characteristics of the melt and nozzle are crucial because pronounced wetting is problematic for the ejection of droplets. A sessile-drop contact angle test stand was set up to evaluate the wetting characteristics of three salts or salt mixtures (NaCl, KCl–NaCl and NaCl–Na 2CO 3) on six different nozzle materials (various ceramics and graphite), i.e. potential nozzle materials. The results indicate a high wetting tendency of most of the examined samples with the exception of KCl-NaCl on graphite. Application of these materials on a MJT test stand confirm the feasibility of our findings.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)855-862
Number of pages8
JournalProduction Engineering
Volume15
Issue number6
DOIs
StatePublished - Dec 2021

Keywords

  • Additive manufacturing
  • Contact angle
  • Material jetting
  • Salts
  • Support structure
  • Wetting

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