Additive Manufacturing Technologies
Abstract
Thank you for taking the time to read this book on Additive Manufacturing (AM).
We hope you benefit from the time and effort it has taken putting it together and that
you think it was a worthwhile undertaking. It all started as a discussion at a
conference in Portugal when we realized that we were putting together books
with similar aims and objectives. Since we are friends as well as colleagues, it
seemed sensible that we join forces rather than compete; sharing the load and
playing to each other’s strengths undoubtedly means a better all-round effort and
result.
We wrote this book because we have all been working in the field of AM for
many years. Although none of us like to be called “old,” we do seem to have
60 years of experience, collectively, and have each established reputations as
educators and researchers in this field. We have each seen the technologies
described in this book take shape and develop into serious commercial tools, with
tens of thousands of users and many millions of parts being made by AM machines
each year. AM is now being incorporated into curricula in many schools,
polytechnics, and universities around the world. More and more students are
becoming aware of these technologies and yet, as we saw it, there was no single
text adequate for such curricula. We believe that the first edition of this book
provided such a text, and based upon the updated information in this 2nd edition,
we hope we’ve improved upon that start.
Additive Manufacturing is defined by a range of technologies that are capable of
translating virtual solid model data into physical models in a quick and easy
process. The data are broken down into a series of 2D cross-sections of a finite
thickness. These cross-sections are fed into AM machines so that they can be
combined, adding them together in a layer-by-layer sequence to form the physical
part. The geometry of the part is therefore clearly reproduced in the AM machine
without having to adjust for manufacturing processes, like attention to tooling,
undercuts, draft angles, or other features. We can say therefore that the AM
machine is a What You See Is What You Build (WYSIWYB) process that is
particularly valuable the more complex the geometry is. This basic principle drives
nearly all AM machines, with variations in each technology in terms of the
techniques used for creating layers and in bonding them together.