metalman8357
Materials
- Oct 5, 2012
- 155
Hi All,
I'm working on a project where our goal is to design an extrusion head for aluminum wire. Basically the goal is to feed 0.035" wire through a tapered ceramic nozzle that is wound in a water cooled copper induction coil so that when it exits the nozzle (tip diameter 0.015") it will be just above the melting temperature of the alloy. We are working on a somewhat 3D dimensional printer (mostly 2D traces) for aluminum and the deposition of the solid aluminum will need to be fairly accurate on the substrate. The problem with using a standard aluminum alloy like 6061 is that the metal transitions rapidly from solid to liquid and this will cause the metal to run and wet out when extruded from the nozzle. We are looking for something more similar to how a plastic would melt (think FDM 3D printing with plastic). A plastic can be extruded at the melting temperature and still keep it's shape while still fusing to the solid plastic material on the build table of a 3D printer. With metal you wouldn't be able to control the liquid molten metal accurately and it would most likely melt the solid base layers below or wet out away from the target solidification area.
My question is, is there an alloy of aluminum that exists that is more pliable or gummy like plastic when it melts? And if so, would it still be able to fuse to solid base material at this temperature assuming no issues with the oxide layers in a vacuum chamber? If using a different alloy isn't the solution, can anyone come up with any ideas (even crazy ones are welcome!) that would solve the issue of the liquid aluminum being too runny to control?
Thanks!
-M
I'm working on a project where our goal is to design an extrusion head for aluminum wire. Basically the goal is to feed 0.035" wire through a tapered ceramic nozzle that is wound in a water cooled copper induction coil so that when it exits the nozzle (tip diameter 0.015") it will be just above the melting temperature of the alloy. We are working on a somewhat 3D dimensional printer (mostly 2D traces) for aluminum and the deposition of the solid aluminum will need to be fairly accurate on the substrate. The problem with using a standard aluminum alloy like 6061 is that the metal transitions rapidly from solid to liquid and this will cause the metal to run and wet out when extruded from the nozzle. We are looking for something more similar to how a plastic would melt (think FDM 3D printing with plastic). A plastic can be extruded at the melting temperature and still keep it's shape while still fusing to the solid plastic material on the build table of a 3D printer. With metal you wouldn't be able to control the liquid molten metal accurately and it would most likely melt the solid base layers below or wet out away from the target solidification area.
My question is, is there an alloy of aluminum that exists that is more pliable or gummy like plastic when it melts? And if so, would it still be able to fuse to solid base material at this temperature assuming no issues with the oxide layers in a vacuum chamber? If using a different alloy isn't the solution, can anyone come up with any ideas (even crazy ones are welcome!) that would solve the issue of the liquid aluminum being too runny to control?
Thanks!
-M