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Resonant ultrasound spectroscopy for quality control of geometrically complex additively manufactured components

Published

Author(s)

Samantha McGuigan, Andrea Arguelles, Anne-Francoise Obaton, Jacques Riviere, Parisa Shokouhi, Alkan Donmez

Abstract

Metal additive manufacturing (AM) has started to overshadow traditional manufacturing practices thanks to its ability to produce complex, high-performance, and application-customized components. However, AM process parameters have not been optimized, leading to inconsistencies and imperfections such as cracks and pores in parts, as well as deviations from the original design. Nondestructive evaluation (NDE) methods used for part qualification such as xray computed tomography (CT) and conventional ultrasonic testing (UT) have limitations in their abilities. X-ray CT is costly, hazardous, and offers limited resolution for larger components while many UT methods have limited applicability for inspection of parts with complex geometries or rough surfaces. Here, we conduct an integrated numerical and experimental study to investigate the feasibility of resonance ultrasound spectroscopy (RUS) as an alternative NDE method to inspect complex AM lattice structures with a varying number of missing struts. The results of numerical simulations including eigenfrequency and frequency domain analyses are promising, indicating that the pristine and defective lattice samples should theoretically be distinguishable. In addition, given a reference intact sample, characterizing the extent of the defect in terms of the number of missing struts appears feasible. We introduce a similarity metric to compare the spectra after being locally normalized. However, the experimental results are not as conclusive. Although pristine and defective lattices may be distinguished for some cases, the number of missing struts cannot be inferred. The discrepancies between the numerical and experimental results are likely due to our simplified assumptions about material properties in numerical simulations and/or the presence of other unaccounted defects and heterogeneities in test samples.
Citation
Additive Manufacturing

Keywords

Additive Manufacturing, ultrasound spectroscopy, defect detection, quality control

Citation

McGuigan, S. , Arguelles, A. , Obaton, A. , Riviere, J. , Shokouhi, P. and Donmez, A. (2020), Resonant ultrasound spectroscopy for quality control of geometrically complex additively manufactured components, Additive Manufacturing, [online], https://doi.org/10.1016/j.addma.2020.101808, https://tsapps.nist.gov/publication/get_pdf.cfm?pub_id=931110 (Accessed July 4, 2024)

Issues

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Created December 26, 2020, Updated February 23, 2022