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Baking up an Additive Manufacturing Delicacy

Baking is my favorite hobby, and it’s a lot more like engineering than you think. Baking requires both meticulous planning and process control – a journey where the end result is the sweet reward eagerly anticipated by my family (and me). My kids regularly ask for muffins, and trust they will hit the mark every time. Crafting the perfect double chocolate muffin involves strategic choices, variable controls and trade-offs…a lot like the gauntlet a seasoned project manager runs. From ingredient choices and mixing methods to refrigeration of the dough and baking time and temperature, each step is a crucial variable in the delicious equation. Achieving consistent flavor demands the use of high-quality ingredients in precise proportions, much like the critical steps in additive manufacturing. Environmental factors, such as humidity and elevation, act as unseen factors, influencing the batter’s rise. For every adept baker, the true assessment of the entire process comes when cracking open the baked goods to reveal perfection…the flawless execution of the underlying chemical reaction.

As I engage in the process of baking, it prompts me to contemplate the steps involved in the entire additive manufacturing (AM) process. With innovation progressing rapidly, it’s essential to step back and analyze the complete lifecycle of the process, extending beyond the mere act of printing. AM is often perceived as just the method of making a complex part faster, so we seldom acknowledge that it is more than act of manufacturing. The community needs to recognize the significance and understand every step of the AM lifecycle and their interactions, from the conceptual design to the final verification.

Figure 1. Major process steps in the iterative lifecycle for additively manufactured components.

However, with the excitement focused on printing technologies and rapid development activities we have seen, a crucial aspect seems to be overlooked – the entire process and how it ultimately plays into the critical role of flying qualified and certified parts. Cheap, complex shapes no longer suffice; what’s required are pedigree parts that can withstand the rigors of space exploration. Each print must be a testament to reliability, ensuring the safety of astronauts or the success of a Mars rover landing. It’s not enough to merely create a shape that meets some geometry; the detailed heat treatments and resulting microstructure must be linked to mechanical properties along with repeatability and reproducibility. Tensile properties at room temperature are straightforward and may be easy to meet, but what about fatigue at elevated temperatures, stress rupture, and fracture toughness? These are essential aspects that demand attention when processing AM pedigree parts that are safe for space flight.

Laser Powder Bed Fusion (L-PBF) GRCop-42 has enabled next generation propulsion concepts like NASA’s Rotating Detonation Rocket Engine testing (Courtesy: NASA)

Things we have observed in AM implementation in critical applications:

It is important that we continue these conversations on the entire AM process lifecycle and understand each other’s inputs, outputs, and challenges. We may own one part of the process, but must integrate into the entire lifecycle. Our double chocolate muffins are going to be awfully bland if someone forgets to add the salt.

L-PBF Turbine demonstrator using NASA’s extreme temperature GRX-810 additively manufactured alloy with 1,000x improved creep

Paul Gradl, Principal Engineer and Subject Matter Expert at NASA Marshall Space Flight Center (MSFC) will be participating at the upcoming Additive Manufacturing Strategies business summit in New York, February 6 to 8, 2024. Gradl will be giving a talk titled “Space Exploration Using AM.”

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