Authors
A Chabot, M Rauch, J-Y Hascoët
Publication date
2019/5/1
Journal
Welding in the World
Volume
63
Pages
759-769
Publisher
Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Description
Additive Manufacturing (AM) is a promising manufacturing technology as compared to subtractive processes, in terms of cost and freedom of manufacturing. Among the AM techniques, Direct Energy Deposition (DED) processes are dedicated to functional metallic parts manufacturing. The energy input can be provided either by laser or electric arc, and having its deposited material as wire or powder form. DED processes incur drawbacks from lack of reproducibility and important production losses, mainly because they are operated in open-loop. Consequently, process monitoring is investigated to control the manufacturing state in real-time and ensure acceptable final parts. Presently, lots of papers have designed single closed-loop controls for DED processes, controlling either thermal, geometrical, or material delivery aspects. Multi-sensors monitoring strategies are also increasingly proposed, as …
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