Open Access
Materials and Design, volume 209, pages 110008
Metal additive manufacturing in aerospace: A review
Byron Blakey Milner
1, 2
,
Paul R Gradl
3
,
Glen Snedden
1
,
Michael Brooks
1
,
Jean Pitot
1
,
Elena Lopez
4
,
Martin Leary
5
,
Filippo Berto
6
,
Anton du Plessis
2, 7
4
Fraunhofer Institut für Werkstoff und Strahltechnik (IWS), Dresden, Germany
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Publication type: Journal Article
Publication date: 2021-11-01
Journal:
Materials and Design
scimago Q1
SJR: 1.684
CiteScore: 14.3
Impact factor: 7.6
ISSN: 02641275, 18734197
General Materials Science
Mechanical Engineering
Mechanics of Materials
Abstract
• Metal additive manufacturing in aerospace comprehensively reviewed. • Discussion of advantages and benefits of metal additive manufacturing in aerospace. • Limitations and challenges described in context of current technology. • Successful examples of metal additive manufacturing in aerospace demonstrated. • Future growth potential and promising areas discussed. Metal additive manufacturing involves manufacturing techniques that add material to produce metallic components, typically layer by layer. The substantial growth in this technology is partly driven by its opportunity for commercial and performance benefits in the aerospace industry. The fundamental opportunities for metal additive manufacturing in aerospace applications include: significant cost and lead-time reductions, novel materials and unique design solutions, mass reduction of components through highly efficient and lightweight designs, and consolidation of multiple components for performance enhancement or risk management, e.g. through internal cooling features in thermally loaded components or by eliminating traditional joining processes. These opportunities are being commercially applied in a range of high-profile aerospace applications including liquid-fuel rocket engines, propellant tanks, satellite components, heat exchangers, turbomachinery, valves, and sustainment of legacy systems. This paper provides a comprehensive review of metal additive manufacturing in the aerospace industry (from industrial/popular as well as technical literature). This provides a current state of the art, while also summarizing the primary application scenarios and the associated commercial and technical benefits of additive manufacturing in these applications. Based on these observations, challenges and potential opportunities are highlighted for metal additive manufacturing for each application scenario.
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