Lightweight Design and Additive Manufacturing of a Fatigue-Critical Automotive Component

Features
Event
CO2 Reduction for Transportation Systems Conference
Authors Abstract
Content
Metal additive manufacturing is finding growing applicability in motorsports and high performance car sectors. Laser-Powder Bed Fusion (L-PBF) is the most developed AM technology for lightweight aluminum alloys producing near-net-shape components of complex geometry that achieve outstanding lightweight targets. A key issue in the widespread industrial acceptability of L-PBF is the structural integrity of these lightweight components when subjected to dynamic loading conditions because it requires in-depth knowledge of the fatigue behavior of L-PBF aluminum under the combined effect of stress gradients, residual stresses, surface condition and process-induced internal defects. This contribution overviews the presentation and application of an integrated design workflow that includes the following phases: i) a topological optimization phase to achieve lightweight targets, ii) a design for additive manufacturing phase supported by process simulation to optimize part production, iii) actual part fabrication in an industrial-grade L-PBF system using AlSi10Mg alloy powder followed by post fabrication heat treatment iv) production and fatigue testing of witness specimens providing relevant design data; v) fatigue testing of the parts to determine actual performance and vi) final assessment of the design know-how developed for fatigue-critical additively manufactured metal components.
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DOI
https://doi.org/10.4271/2022-37-0026
Pages
7
Citation
Nicoletto, G., Riva, E., and uriati, F., "Lightweight Design and Additive Manufacturing of a Fatigue-Critical Automotive Component," Advances and Current Practices in Mobility 5(3):1048-1054, 2023, https://doi.org/10.4271/2022-37-0026.
Additional Details
Publisher
Published
Jun 14, 2022
Product Code
2022-37-0026
Content Type
Journal Article
Language
English