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Laser additive manufacturing machine

Additive manufacturing machines

Additive manufacturing techniques enable the production of components through the sequential layering of materials. In recent years, there has been significant advancement in laser additive manufacturing processes, driven by the introduction of new technologies alongside laser sources, which have fueled this growth in various industrial sectors. The incorporation of laser additive manufacturing systems into the production workflow aids in minimizing costs and reducing waste. This method allows for the creation of a diverse range of components with different geometries and materials. Additive manufacturing utilizing a powder bed is ideal for small components that demand high precision in deposition. Conversely, additive laser manufacturing through powder spraying or wire addition is better suited for larger components and increased production rates.

WLAM (Wire Laser Additive Manufacturing)

The WLAM (DED - Direct Energy Deposition) process allows for the creation of 3D parts using a laser beam to add molten wire.

This WLAM technique produces very good internal quality (no porosity) and improves deposition precision, with a much more stable and consistent bead (0,8~2,2 mm) compared to Arc processes (3 to 8 mm).

  • Excellent metallurgical quality

  • Large parts (up to 12 m)

  • High build speeds depending on the material

  • Very Low energy consumption compared to normal WAAM (till minus 85% less)

  • Multi-material manufacturing

  • Controlled deformation

  • Use of the “right material”

  • Diversity of materials due to the availability of welding wire

  • High metallurgical quality

Wire laser additive manufacturing

Wire Laser Additive Manufacturing (WLAM) is a form of additive manufacturing where a wire feedstock is used as the material source, and a laser provides the heat source for melting the wire to form a part layer by layer. 

A laser heats and melts a metal wire, which is fed into the melt pool. 

The wire can be fed coaxially with the laser beam or at an angle, and the movement of the laser head or the workpiece platform builds the part layer by layer. 

Additive manufacturing with Laser and wire feeder: WLAM

Additive Manufactoring with Wire

Additive manufacturing is a comparably new production method, involving a component being constructed via layer-by-layer material coating. Originally developed for prototyping, today it is mainly used for the production of geometrically complex components in small batch sizes from 1 to 1,000. Here, additive manufacturing is more economical than conventional methods, for the most part.

Advantages of WLAM

Efficiency

WLAM can have high material efficiency, often exceeding 90%, as there is minimal waste compared to powder-based methods.

Cost-Effectiveness: 

Generally, wire is cheaper than metal powders used in other AM processes, and there's no need for expensive powder handling systems.

Large Parts

Suitable for manufacturing large parts due to the high deposition rates compared to powder bed fusion.

Material Variety

A wide range of materials can be used, including titanium alloys, stainless steels, aluminum, nickel alloys, etc., as long as they are available in wire form.

Safety

Less environmental contamination risk since wire doesn't aerosolize like powders can.

 

Low energy consumption: 

Compare to normal welding our technology can consume till 85% LESS energy

 

Additive manufacturing applications – overview

How does additive manufacturing work?

The main tool involved in metal additive manufacturing is a system which contains a laser, a movable metal deposition head and a metal powder nozzle or wire feeder. The metal deposition head or the wire feeder head, which are suitable for 3D printing, is moved over a building platform while it adds the metal powder or the wire by heating it with the laser beam and melting it on the surface. After the material has been cooled down, the next metal layer can be applied, thereby additively generating a three-dimensional component in accordance with the construction plan. The technical principle of the additive manufacturing process is basically the same as the cladding process. The difference is that it does not revolve around two-dimensional layers: instead, three-dimensional forms are created.