Additive friction stir deposition

Additive manufacturing is playing a crucial role in Industry 4.0, rapidly shifting its application from research and development in prototyping to the fabrication of industrial parts. Laser-based additive manufacturing (LAM) techniques have been adopted widely and become the most researched area in...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Solid State Additive Manufacturing
Main Author: Gopan V.; Natarajan V.D.; Sarath S.; Varughese R.T.; Kumar P.
Format: Book chapter
Language:English
Published: CRC Press 2023
Online Access:https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85176850419&doi=10.1201%2f9781032616025-3&partnerID=40&md5=123cfb54929b02a74b81c6fb882cf5e5
id 2-s2.0-85176850419
spelling 2-s2.0-85176850419
Gopan V.; Natarajan V.D.; Sarath S.; Varughese R.T.; Kumar P.
Additive friction stir deposition
2023
Solid State Additive Manufacturing


10.1201/9781032616025-3
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85176850419&doi=10.1201%2f9781032616025-3&partnerID=40&md5=123cfb54929b02a74b81c6fb882cf5e5
Additive manufacturing is playing a crucial role in Industry 4.0, rapidly shifting its application from research and development in prototyping to the fabrication of industrial parts. Laser-based additive manufacturing (LAM) techniques have been adopted widely and become the most researched area in metal additive manufacturing. However, porosity and residual stresses developed during the LAM process create a bottleneck between industrial demands and process capabilities. Additive friction stir deposition (AFSD) is a process that has the ability to overcome these limitations as well as providing additively-manufactured structures that possess superior microstructure and mechanical properties. The enhanced mechanical and microstructural properties of the deposited structure, its relative ease of use, flexibility in the feed material, and scalability confers AFSD a huge potential in the metal additive manufacturing process. This chapter focuses on the key aspects of AFSD with an emphasis on the investigations of microstructural and mechanical properties of the resulting product. This chapter aims to provide researchers and industrial professionals with an understanding of the fundamental aspects of AFSD, its experimental setup, its process-property relationship and the current process limitations related to reinforcement loading, in-pane resolution and tool wear. The advantages and limitations of AFSD compared to other additive manufacturing techniques and scope for improvements are also discussed. © 2024 selection and editorial matter, Amlan Kar and Zafar Alam, individual chapters.
CRC Press

English
Book chapter

author Gopan V.; Natarajan V.D.; Sarath S.; Varughese R.T.; Kumar P.
spellingShingle Gopan V.; Natarajan V.D.; Sarath S.; Varughese R.T.; Kumar P.
Additive friction stir deposition
author_facet Gopan V.; Natarajan V.D.; Sarath S.; Varughese R.T.; Kumar P.
author_sort Gopan V.; Natarajan V.D.; Sarath S.; Varughese R.T.; Kumar P.
title Additive friction stir deposition
title_short Additive friction stir deposition
title_full Additive friction stir deposition
title_fullStr Additive friction stir deposition
title_full_unstemmed Additive friction stir deposition
title_sort Additive friction stir deposition
publishDate 2023
container_title Solid State Additive Manufacturing
container_volume
container_issue
doi_str_mv 10.1201/9781032616025-3
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85176850419&doi=10.1201%2f9781032616025-3&partnerID=40&md5=123cfb54929b02a74b81c6fb882cf5e5
description Additive manufacturing is playing a crucial role in Industry 4.0, rapidly shifting its application from research and development in prototyping to the fabrication of industrial parts. Laser-based additive manufacturing (LAM) techniques have been adopted widely and become the most researched area in metal additive manufacturing. However, porosity and residual stresses developed during the LAM process create a bottleneck between industrial demands and process capabilities. Additive friction stir deposition (AFSD) is a process that has the ability to overcome these limitations as well as providing additively-manufactured structures that possess superior microstructure and mechanical properties. The enhanced mechanical and microstructural properties of the deposited structure, its relative ease of use, flexibility in the feed material, and scalability confers AFSD a huge potential in the metal additive manufacturing process. This chapter focuses on the key aspects of AFSD with an emphasis on the investigations of microstructural and mechanical properties of the resulting product. This chapter aims to provide researchers and industrial professionals with an understanding of the fundamental aspects of AFSD, its experimental setup, its process-property relationship and the current process limitations related to reinforcement loading, in-pane resolution and tool wear. The advantages and limitations of AFSD compared to other additive manufacturing techniques and scope for improvements are also discussed. © 2024 selection and editorial matter, Amlan Kar and Zafar Alam, individual chapters.
publisher CRC Press
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language English
format Book chapter
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record_format scopus
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