Macro-, meso- and microstructural characterization of metallic lattice structures manufactured by additive manufacturing assisted investment casting

Vitor Hugo Carneiro, Shelley Rawson, H Puga, Philip Withers

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Cellular materials are recognized for their high specific mechanical properties, making them desirable in ultra-lightweight applications. Periodic lattices have tunable properties and may be manufactured by metallic additive manufacturing (AM) techniques. However, AM can lead to issues with un-melted powder, macro/micro porosity, dimensional control and heterogeneous microstructures. This study overcomes these problems through a novel technique, combining additive manufacturing and investment casting to produce detailed investment cast lattice structures. Fused filament fabrication is used to fabricate a pattern used as the mold for the investment casting of aluminium A356 alloy into high-conformity thin-ribbed (~0.6mm thickness) scaffolds. X-ray micro-computed tomography (CT) is used to characterize macro- and meso-scale defects. Optical and scanning electron (SEM) microscopies are used to characterize the microstructure of the cast structures. Slight dimensional (macroscale) variations originate from the 3D printing of the pattern. At the mesoscale, the casting process introduces very fine (~3m) porosity, along with small numbers of (~25m) gas entrapment defects in the horizontal struts. At a microstructural level, both the (~70 μm) globular/dendritic grains and secondary phases show no significant variations across the lattices. This method is a promising alternative means for producing highly detailed non-stochastic metallic cellular lattices
Original languageEnglish
JournalScientific Reports
Publication statusAccepted/In press - 7 Jan 2021

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