Thursday, January 03, 2008

 

New manufacturing process

This is not directly a RepRap idea, but I wanted to post it

1. Because it could be useful, and
2. To stop anyone patenting it if it is.

As you know, we've been playing with silicone soft moulds for making things in resin:



Suppose, instead of pouring in resin, you put a loop of wire in the cavity, flowed an electrolyte through the mould, switched on a current, and metal-plated the wire? Might it plate to fill the cavity with a metal object to match the cavity's shape, with the rate of deposition slowing as the growing surface approached the silicone where there would thus be slower flow?

Just a thought...

Comments:
The only thing that might not work is that plating doesn't build up like that. I don't know whether or not it does, but the best way to find out would be to try it. You have the molds, so why don't you try it out? Even if it doesn't work, it would look really cool.
 
I think the plating is dependent on there being a flow of the electrolyte over the surface being plated. I suspect your scheme would work well until the accreting object began to strike the walls of the mould and obstruct the flow of metal ion rich electrolyte.
 
Plating won't build up like the smooth layers of an onion, or a dip candle.

You'll get knobs and spikes on your "core" as the object grows, which will lead to cracks and voids in the finished object.
 
The accepted way is to build a mandrel of a hard, conductive material, and grow a shell within that. You can play nice tricks by switching the electrolyte bath several times, making a laminate material. IIRC, it's used to make pen barrels.
 
I know that columnar grain growth can be frustrated in vapor deposition by adding an impurity metal that interferes with crystallization. If you could find the right mix of salts, this could make a very strong material. It would require lots of energy, though.
 
The point about plating slowing as the surfaces got closer together may be good, not bad, as that's what makes the part conform to the mould.

I'll try it when I get a chance.

Meanwhile, I've just cast Wood's metal in silicone, and it works really well. See href="http://reprap.org/bin/view/Main/SoftToolingForCasting#Other_materials">here.
 
Grow from the outside in? Dust mould with graphite ...

Vik :v)
 
How about using an electrode with a large surface area that can be shaped to nearly fill the cavity? Something the consistency of steel wool, for example.
 
The process is called electrodeposition, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electrodeposition and it has been in use for quite a while. Some fascinating recent results include the ability to produce nanoparticles by applying very high voltages and/or currents; of course that doesn't apply to what you're thinking. Smoother surfaces may be achieved by performing the process in a magnetic field. Maybe if you cut the mold from a stiff but porous material like a ceramic foam you could immerse it and allow the ions to flow through?
 
This comment has been removed by the author.
 
Hi Adrian,

... look here: http://www.servometer.de/Inhalte/technol.html
(here the only english site-info http://www.servometer.com/)

It's galvanic "electroforming" of thin-walled nickel-objects from (later dissolved) aluminium-parts.

I have some samples made from nickel and some gold-covered bellows and contacting-tools too.

Could be made with reprapped plastic-objects with conducting surfaces (maybe covered with conducting paint) too ...

Maybe an idea in combination with the paperwork-print-fabbing ( http://forums.reprap.org/read.php?73,7812 ), when using cartonage-sheets covered with aluminium-foils to get rigid objects?

Viktor
 
Is there any way to make the mold conductive? That would help with growing the metal from the outside in. Perhaps you could spray-paint some kind of a conductive layer onto the inside of your existing mold.
 
"a stiff but porous material like a ceramic foam"

You mean like plaster of Paris? :)

Steel wool is intriguing, since it cuts down on the total electric charge needed & gives the whole thing a fiber-reinforced quality. However, there'd be some voids that would end up filled with electrolyte; bad mojo in terms of pitting corrosion and overall mechanical integrity.
 
... when you want a porous ceramic-like object, then you can fill the inner volume with small polystyrol-balls (not the bulk material) and fill the volume between the polystyrol-balls with a hardening and heatresistant liquid (waterglass for example).

Then fire the object, so the polystyrol fumes out and you have a rigid porous part with the shape of the preformed object.

AFAIK it's the same method used for foam-aluminium ...

Viktor
 
Yes, I think the process which you are talking about is Electrophoretic deposition, wherein particles suspended in liquid medium migrate under electric field and are deposited on an electrode. There’s no harm in trying what you suggest, but I would recommend making the wire work like an electrode so that particles could be deposited onto the wire to fill the cavity. You may want to use a big size wire to fill it easily. Also, you need to make sure that the electrode you are using is high temperature resistant. I recommend looking at a website dedicated to assembly and manufacturing services in joining dissimilar materials - http://www.s-bond.com
 
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