
Ability to finish surfaces of 3D-printed superalloys improves performance for engines, industry
Recent advances in 3D printing with metals are making it an increasingly attractive option, often offering both cost savings and higher-performing components. The resulting parts, however, have one major drawback that threatens to offset the advantages of metal 3D printing, or additive manufacturing: they have much rougher surfaces than those produced by traditional methods. This can dramatically reduce performance and durability in many applications.
Smoothing these surfaces, especially on strong, high-performance metals, is its own challenge, and it’s one NASA has undertaken in hopes of both improving rocket engines and making 3D printing viable across more industries.
Paul Gradl has led several additive manufacturing projects at NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama, including efforts to use the technology to build rocket engines. “Additive manufacturing allows us to fabricate parts much quicker, and we see cost savings because of that,” he said, adding that 3D printing could reduce engine weight and allow for part reduction, eliminating joints.
Components like combustion chambers, injectors, and nozzles traditionally required multiple parts to be manufactured and then joined or fastened together. Instead, they can be printed as entire units, reducing the number parts and, therefore, the number of seams that can become points of failure. But rough surfaces threaten to reduce fatigue life, speed up corrosion, and cause turbulence in fluid flows, said Gradl.
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