State of the Art in Directed Energy Deposition: From Additive Manufacturing to Materials Design

Additive manufacturing (AM) is a new paradigm for the design and production of high-performance components for aerospace, medical, energy, and automotive applications. This review will exclusively cover directed energy deposition (DED)-AM, with a focus on the deposition of powder-feed based metal an...

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Main Authors: Adrita Dass, Atieh Moridi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2019-06-01
Series:Coatings
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2079-6412/9/7/418
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spelling doaj-01f2ea6c569f488bba8405dd3f8412522020-11-24T22:09:32ZengMDPI AGCoatings2079-64122019-06-019741810.3390/coatings9070418coatings9070418State of the Art in Directed Energy Deposition: From Additive Manufacturing to Materials DesignAdrita Dass0Atieh Moridi1Materials Science and Engineering Department, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14850, USAMechanical and Aerospace Engineering Department, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14850, USAAdditive manufacturing (AM) is a new paradigm for the design and production of high-performance components for aerospace, medical, energy, and automotive applications. This review will exclusively cover directed energy deposition (DED)-AM, with a focus on the deposition of powder-feed based metal and alloy systems. This paper provides a comprehensive review on the classification of DED systems, process variables, process physics, modelling efforts, common defects, mechanical properties of DED parts, and quality control methods. To provide a practical framework to print different materials using DED, a process map using the linear heat input and powder feed rate as variables is constructed. Based on the process map, three different areas that are not optimized for DED are identified. These areas correspond to the formation of a lack of fusion, keyholing, and mixed mode porosity in the printed parts. In the final part of the paper, emerging applications of DED from repairing damaged parts to bulk combinatorial alloys design are discussed. This paper concludes with recommendations for future research in order to transform the technology from “form” to “function,” which can provide significant potential benefits to different industries.https://www.mdpi.com/2079-6412/9/7/418additive manufacturingdirected energy depositionprocess mapslaser engineered net shapingdilutionsolidification cooling rateprocess-microstructure relationship
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Adrita Dass
Atieh Moridi
spellingShingle Adrita Dass
Atieh Moridi
State of the Art in Directed Energy Deposition: From Additive Manufacturing to Materials Design
Coatings
additive manufacturing
directed energy deposition
process maps
laser engineered net shaping
dilution
solidification cooling rate
process-microstructure relationship
author_facet Adrita Dass
Atieh Moridi
author_sort Adrita Dass
title State of the Art in Directed Energy Deposition: From Additive Manufacturing to Materials Design
title_short State of the Art in Directed Energy Deposition: From Additive Manufacturing to Materials Design
title_full State of the Art in Directed Energy Deposition: From Additive Manufacturing to Materials Design
title_fullStr State of the Art in Directed Energy Deposition: From Additive Manufacturing to Materials Design
title_full_unstemmed State of the Art in Directed Energy Deposition: From Additive Manufacturing to Materials Design
title_sort state of the art in directed energy deposition: from additive manufacturing to materials design
publisher MDPI AG
series Coatings
issn 2079-6412
publishDate 2019-06-01
description Additive manufacturing (AM) is a new paradigm for the design and production of high-performance components for aerospace, medical, energy, and automotive applications. This review will exclusively cover directed energy deposition (DED)-AM, with a focus on the deposition of powder-feed based metal and alloy systems. This paper provides a comprehensive review on the classification of DED systems, process variables, process physics, modelling efforts, common defects, mechanical properties of DED parts, and quality control methods. To provide a practical framework to print different materials using DED, a process map using the linear heat input and powder feed rate as variables is constructed. Based on the process map, three different areas that are not optimized for DED are identified. These areas correspond to the formation of a lack of fusion, keyholing, and mixed mode porosity in the printed parts. In the final part of the paper, emerging applications of DED from repairing damaged parts to bulk combinatorial alloys design are discussed. This paper concludes with recommendations for future research in order to transform the technology from “form” to “function,” which can provide significant potential benefits to different industries.
topic additive manufacturing
directed energy deposition
process maps
laser engineered net shaping
dilution
solidification cooling rate
process-microstructure relationship
url https://www.mdpi.com/2079-6412/9/7/418
work_keys_str_mv AT adritadass stateoftheartindirectedenergydepositionfromadditivemanufacturingtomaterialsdesign
AT atiehmoridi stateoftheartindirectedenergydepositionfromadditivemanufacturingtomaterialsdesign
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