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Data associated with publication: "The Difficulty of Measuring Surface Topography in Additive Manufacturing: A Comparison Between Measured and True Surface Features of Binder-Jet Printed Samples." by C. Brown, M. Nescio, V. Chadha, C. Zheng, E. Abelev, M. Chmielus, T. D. B. Jacobs, published in the ASME Journal of Tribology, 2025

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DataCite Commons2025-03-21 更新2025-04-17 收录
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Surface topography represents a critical barrier to the advancement of additive manufacturing (AM). Because some internal features cannot be polished, and because of a growing trend of in situ process monitoring, it is important to understand the as-built surface topography of AM components. Here we highlight the challenges of using industry-standard surface-measurement techniques on binder-jet-printed parts. We measured the topography of binder-jet-printed Inconel Alloy 625 samples in their green state and over the course of sintering; this system allowed the investigation of identical starting materials undergoing systematic changes in topography. Specifically, we compared the results from industry-standard surface-measurement techniques— optical interferometry, 3D microscopy (by fringe projection), and stylus profilometry—against the “true topography,” as revealed by cross-section scanning electron microscopy. While the true topography changed significantly with sintering, the industry-standard techniques detected no change in root-mean-square height because of complex surface features, including multi-scale topography, overhangs, and steep surface slopes. While these findings do not invalidate the use of industry-standard techniques for binder-jet-printed samples, they demonstrate a challenge in their application, and they motivate the development of new metrics and new techniques to more accurately describe surface topography in AM.
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University of Pittsburgh
创建时间:
2025-03-21
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