(Non-)linear stiffness customisation of metallic additive manufactured springs
Abstract
Additive manufacturing (AM) facilitates the fabrication of compliant mechanisms through its free-form and design customisation capabilities. Specifically, the properties of kinetic mechanisms such as springs can be extended with regards to their inherent (non-)linear stiffness functions. This allows for the customisation of AM springs according to user preferences. By combining the design synthesis approach of building blocks with the structural optimisation approach for AM, it is possible to define and customise spring stiffness functionalities. The optimisation process employs an automated computational framework based on a genetic algorithm scheme, which has been demonstrated through randomised and reference case studies. This framework enables the attainment of linear, progressive (stiffening), and degressive (softening) stiffness curves. The manufacturability of the springs has been validated through laser powder bed fusion using stainless-steel material 17–4 PH (H900). The springs have resulted in an accuracy error of maximum 6.48% and precision error of maximum 5% through compression testing. Show more
Permanent link
https://doi.org/10.3929/ethz-b-000605229Publication status
publishedExternal links
Journal / series
Virtual and Physical PrototypingVolume
Pages / Article No.
Publisher
Taylor & FrancisSubject
Laser powder bed fusion; 3D-printing; automation; compliant mechanisms; design synthesis; design freedomOrganisational unit
03943 - Meboldt, Mirko / Meboldt, Mirko
Funding
178689 - AIProVE – Adjustable Impedance Elements for Product Validation in Compliant Environments (SNF)
More
Show all metadata
ETH Bibliography
yes
Altmetrics