2021
DOI: 10.3390/app11072962
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Multi-Resolution SPH Simulation of a Laser Powder Bed Fusion Additive Manufacturing Process

Abstract: This paper presents an efficient mesoscale simulation of a Laser Powder Bed Fusion (LPBF) process using the Smoothed Particle Hydrodynamics (SPH) method. The efficiency lies in reducing the computational effort via spatial adaptivity, for which a dynamic particle refinement pattern with an optimized neighbor-search algorithm is used. The melt pool dynamics is modeled by resolving the thermal, mechanical, and material fields in a single laser track application. After validating the solver by two benchmark tests… Show more

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Cited by 44 publications
(18 citation statements)
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“…Figure 9 presents the remelting depth as a function of laser power and scanning speed as calculated by the heat conduction model. The depth of the melt pool rises nearly linearly with increased laser power P and reduced scanning speed v , which is similar to the findings of Afrasiabi et al [ 20 ]. The results confirm that once the heat source provides sufficient energy to melt the material, an increase of the line energy generally leads to larger melt pool dimensions.…”
Section: Resultssupporting
confidence: 89%
“…Figure 9 presents the remelting depth as a function of laser power and scanning speed as calculated by the heat conduction model. The depth of the melt pool rises nearly linearly with increased laser power P and reduced scanning speed v , which is similar to the findings of Afrasiabi et al [ 20 ]. The results confirm that once the heat source provides sufficient energy to melt the material, an increase of the line energy generally leads to larger melt pool dimensions.…”
Section: Resultssupporting
confidence: 89%
“…They highlighted in their paper that SPH, contrary to the Eulerian numerical approaches used in previous studies (King et al , 2015a, Khairallah et al , 2016), can trivially track the motion of a specific material point at any time over the length of a simulation. Intending to speed up the simulation, Afrasiabi et al (2021) introduced spatial adaptivity to the SPH framework of Russell et al (2018) and achieved a significant enhancement in the computational performance of their code. A graphical summary of these results is shown in Figure 16, suggesting that the extension of particle-based PBF models from mono-material to multimaterial is straightforward and needs to be considered an immediate future work.…”
Section: Simulation Of Multimaterials Powder Bed Fusion Techniquesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…To accelerate the simulations, model order reduction and proper orthogonal decomposition can be applied [ 66 ], however the computational time is still unacceptable for practical purposes. Research into adaptive refinement strategies for particle based simulations has just started and requires further investigations [ 67 ].…”
Section: Numerical Simulation and Machine Learning Of Metal Ammentioning
confidence: 99%