Additive Manufacturing of Metals, PDF eBook DRM Free

$125.00

The book reviews the various techniques that are currently in use and describes the many possible applications.

Additive Manufacturing of Metals
David. J. Fisher
Materials Research Foundations Vol. 67
Publication Date 2020, 154 Pages
Print ISBN 978-1-64490-062-8 (release date February, 2020)
ePDF ISBN 978-1-64490-063-5
DOI: 10.21741/9781644900637

Additive manufacturing of metals is an increasingly important process for producing or repairing structural components in the aerospace, medical and dental industries. The book reviews the various techniques that are currently in use and describes the many possible applications. The review is based on 350 original resources and includes their direct web link for in-depth reading.

Keywords
Additive Manufacturing, 3-Dimensional Printing,, Layered Manufacturing, Titanium Alloys, Nickel Alloys, Iron Alloys, Stainless Steels, Aluminium, Cobalt, Copper, Magnesium, Niobium, Tantal, Tin, Tungsten, Zinc, Porous Metals, Biomedical Materials, Orthopaedic Devices, Dental Implants, Aerospace Components, Laser Melting, Electron-Beam Melting

flyer

Table of Content
Introduction 1
Aluminium 16
Al-Ce 18
Al-Cu 18
Al-Mg 19
Al-Mn 26
Al-Si 26
AlSi10Mg 28
Al-Zn 37
Cobalt 38
Copper 40
Iron 44
AISI304 47
AISI316 50
AISI H11 60
AISI H13 60
17-4PH 62
Magnesium 68
Nickel 70
Hastelloy X 72
Haynes-282 72
Inconel-625 73
Inconel-718 78
Inconel-738 86
Monel K500 87
Niobium 88
Tantalum 88
Tin 89
Titanium 90
Ti-6Al-4V 97
Tungsten 120
Zinc 121
References 122
Keyword Index 149
About the author 151

Related sites:
https://markforged.com/learn/metal-additive-manufacturing-introduction/

About the author

Dr Fisher has wide knowledge and experience of the fields of engineering, metallurgy and solid-state physics, beginning with work at Rolls-Royce Aero Engines on turbine-blade research, related to the Concord supersonic passenger-aircraft project, which led to a BSc degree (1971) from the University of Wales. This was followed by theoretical and experimental work on the directional solidification of eutectic alloys having the ultimate aim of developing composite turbine blades. This work led to a doctoral degree (1978) from the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology (Lausanne). He then acted for many years as an editor of various academic journals, in particular Defect and Diffusion Forum. In recent years he has specialised in writing monographs which introduce readers to the most rapidly developing ideas in the fields of engineering, metallurgy and solid-state physics. His latest paper will appear shortly in International Materials Reviews, and he is co-author of the widely-cited student textbook, Fundamentals of Solidification.