Artigo Revisado por pares

Investigating Additive Manufactured Lattice Structures: A Multi-Instrument Approach

2019; Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers; Volume: 69; Issue: 5 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1109/tim.2019.2959293

ISSN

1557-9662

Autores

Gloria Allevi, Lorenzo Capponi, Paolo Castellini, Paolo Chiariotti, Franco Docchio, Fabrizio Freni, Roberto Marsili, Milena Martarelli, Roberto Montanini, Simone Pasinetti, Antonino Quattrocchi, Robert Rossetti, Gianluca Rossi, Giovanna Sansoni, E. P. Tomasini,

Tópico(s)

Manufacturing Process and Optimization

Resumo

Additive manufacturing (AM) is gaining relevance for the freedom it gives to designers in experimenting topologically optimized components, especially those having lattice morphology. Indeed, these are of great interest in various application fields (automotive, biomedical, etc.) because, in addition to a significant mass reduction, lattice topology (microscale) can be tuned to provide the final product (macroscale) with the specific properties it needs to exhibit. However, additive manufactured lattice structures are still to be fully investigated, given the mismatch between the designed and the manufactured final product. This article presents some preliminary results from a multi-instrument approach, grounding on non-contact measurement techniques, to characterize lattice and trabecular structures in terms of dimensional accuracy, surface morphology, stress-strain distribution, and modal behavior.

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