Back in 1938, Berthold Hermle set up a bolt and machine screw manufacturing company in southwestern Germany. Now the firm he founded is combining additive manufacturing technology with the company’s traditional strength in subtractive methods such as machining to create a single machine tool of unparalleled capability.
MPA technology is a thermal injection process which uses metal powder and kinetic energy to meld materials to the build surfaces for large-volume components, and it can result in parts with highly complex inner geometries.
In the process, information from a CAD file is used to direct a high-powered jet of very hot steam to propel metal powder suspended in nitrogen through a ‘de Laval’ nozzle onto a substrate at three times the speed of sound. TCT says this ‘micro-forging’ allows for up to six dissimilar metals to be layered.
In the MPA process, powder particles are accelerated within a carrier gas to high speeds and applied via a nozzle to a substrate. Back in 2007, Hermle created a coating process developed by a subsidiary, Innovaris, that they called Alchemy. That process combined a coating procedure with conventional milling.
Now in their MPA process, metal powder is applied by kinetic compacting – or micro-forging – in a process which takes metal powder, water, electricity and oxygen-reduced compressed air to build completely sealed working materials.
The powder material used in the process is accelerated to very high speeds within a carrier gas and blasted through a nozzle onto the substrate at pressures of 10 GPa and temperatures up to 1000 ° C. The heat, speeds and pressure of the method leads to strong deformation of individual particles and results in a binding contact surface between them.
Hermle says the physical properties of the deposited metal layers – and transitions they go through as a result – are required to meet specific mechanical and thermal requirements and that they are optimally adjusted according to which metal powders are used.
The MPA technology is capable of dealing with materials such as hot work tool steel, stainless steel, pure copper and bronze, titanium and aluminum among others.
Parts up to 550 mm in diameter, 460 mm deep and weigh up to 600 kg – with the option to use a water-soluble filler material to create internal features – can result in features like conformal cooling channels in plastic injection molds. This micro-forging means dissimilar materials like a heat-conducting copper core inside a tool steel exterior can be created.
The method is controlled with MPA-Studio, CAM software created by Hermle, which takes a layer-by-layer analysis and machining approach to building component geometry.
What sort of impact do you think this kind of hybrid technology will have on the future of manufacturing. Let us know what you think in the Hemle MPA 40 forum thread on 3DPB.com.