Microheater Array Powder Sintering for Additive Manufacturing
Student: Michael Lynn
Degree: M.S., May 2022
Major Professor: Dr. Wenchao Zhou
Research Area(s):
Microelectronic-Photonic Materials & Devices
Energy Materials & Devices
Background/Relevance
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SLS is slow, expensive, unreliable, and hard to scale.
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MAPS uses a microheater array as energy source to offer scalability, ~1000s of microheaters VS single point laser
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MAPS print heads are cheap to produce, thick film processing, disposable
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Order of magnitude less power consumption.
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Microheaters offer closed loop control through self sensing of temperature.
Innovation
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Develop a new method of fabricating a large microheater array.
Approach
- Build reliable large scale microheater array
- Characterize TCR and I/V characteristics in air, helium, and cold plasma
- Model heat transfer across various media into nanoparticle materials, characterize real world behavior and validate model.
- Prototype MAPS printer with improved print head and apply validated model to predict performance and create new standards for AM.
Key Results
- Designing and manufacturing large area microheater array
- Developing improved printer control and scanning calorimetry
- Moving toward commercialization with NSF I-Corps
Conclusions
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Plan to overcome the requirement of a small air gap problem by scaling heater array and improving repeatability.
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Plan to improve microheater lifetime without increasing cost through thick film processing
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Plan to demonstrate commercial viability through MVP development and demonstration of industrially useful prints.
Future Work
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Develop scanning calorimetry standards for various materials
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Build HTCC heater arrays and push reliable operating temperature to 1600-2000 °C