In situ detection of cracks during laser powder bed fusion using acoustic emission monitoring

Abstract

Despite rapid development of laser powder bed fusion (L-PBF) and its monitoring techniques, there is still a lack of in situ crack detection methods, among which acoustic emission (AE) is one of the most sensitive. To elaborate on this topic, in situ AE monitoring was applied to L-PBF manufacturing of a high-strength Al92Mn6Ce2 (at. %) alloy and combined with subsequent X-ray computed tomography. By using a structure borne high-frequency sensor, even a simple threshold-based monitoring was able to detect AE activity associated with cracking, which occurred not only during L-PBF itself, but also after the build job was completed, i.e. in the cooling phase. AE data analysis revealed that crack-related signals can easily be separated from the background noise (e.g. inert gas circulation pump) through their specific shape of a waveform, as well as their energy, skewness and kurtosis. Thus, AE was verified to be a promising method for L-PBF monitoring, enabling to detect formation of cracks regardless of their spatial and temporal occurrence.

Description
Keywords
Additive manufacturing, Laser powder bed fusion, Aluminium alloy, Acoustic emission, X-ray computed tomography, Monitoring, Crack detection
Citation
Seleznev, M., Gustmann, T., Friebel, J. M., Peuker, U. A., Kühn, U., Hufenbach, J. K., et al. (2022). In situ detection of cracks during laser powder bed fusion using acoustic emission monitoring. 3. https://doi.org//10.1016/j.addlet.2022.100099
License
CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 Unported