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Fiber reinforced additive manufacturing: structurally motivated print orientation and sequential topology optimization of anisotropic material

Noah Ray (Department of Mechanical and Materials Engineering, Queen's University, Kingston, Canada)
Il Yong Kim (Department of Mechanical and Materials Engineering, Queen's University, Kingston, Canada)

Rapid Prototyping Journal

ISSN: 1355-2546

Article publication date: 29 December 2023

Issue publication date: 7 February 2024

112

Abstract

Purpose

Fiber reinforced additive manufacturing (FRAM) is an emerging technology that combines additive manufacturing and composite materials. As a result, design freedom offered by the manufacturing process can be leveraged in design optimization. The purpose of the study is to propose a novel method that improves structural performance by optimizing 3D print orientation of FRAM components.

Design/methodology/approach

This work proposes a two-part design optimization method that optimizes 3D global print orientation and topology of a component to improve a structural objective function. The method considers two classes of design variables: (1) print orientation design variables and (2) density-based topology design variables. Print orientation design variables determine a unique 3D print orientation to influence anisotropic material properties. Topology optimization determines an optimal distribution of material within the optimized print orientation.

Findings

Two academic examples are used to demonstrate basic behavior of the method in tension and shear. Print orientation and sequential topology optimization improve structural compliance by 90% and 58%, respectively. An industry-level example, an aerospace component, is optimized. The proposed method is used to achieve an 11% and 15% reduction of structural compliance compared to alternative FRAM designs. In addition, compliance is reduced by 43% compared to an equal-mass aluminum design.

Originality/value

Current research surrounding FRAM focuses on the manufacturing process and neglects opportunities to leverage design freedom provided by FRAM. Previous FRAM optimization methods only optimize fiber orientation within a 2D plane and do not establish an optimized 3D print orientation, neglecting exploration of the entire orientation design space.

Keywords

Citation

Ray, N. and Kim, I.Y. (2024), "Fiber reinforced additive manufacturing: structurally motivated print orientation and sequential topology optimization of anisotropic material", Rapid Prototyping Journal, Vol. 30 No. 2, pp. 305-322. https://doi.org/10.1108/RPJ-08-2023-0276

Publisher

:

Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2023, Emerald Publishing Limited

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