The Coming Proliferation of High Speed Sintering?

By on April 21st, 2017 in research

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 A buckle part, automotive gear and pipe fitting made with HSS. (Image courtesy of Loughborough University.)
A buckle part, automotive gear and pipe fitting made with HSS. (Image courtesy of Loughborough University.)

In the last few years, a number of exciting new technologies have emerged in the 3D printing industry that promise the integration of additive manufacturing (AM) into the larger world of manufacturing, including Carbonā€™s Digital Light Synthesis and HPā€™s Multi Jet Fusion (MJF). 

Before these existed commercially, however, there was high speed sintering (HSS). 

Invented and developed by Neil Hopkinson and his team while he was performing research at Loughborough University and, later, the University of Sheffield, HSS uses infrared lamps and an inkjet printhead to outpace other AM technologies like selective laser sintering (SLS). Hopkinson is now at inkjet printhead manufacturer Xaar, where he leads the companyā€™s 3D printing division.

As Xaar looks to fulfill its stated 2020 vision, Hopkinson and his team have just cut the ribbon on Xaarā€™s new 3D Centre in Nottingham, England. ENGINEERING.com reached out to Hopkinson to learn just what this 2020 vision looks like and how HSS will play a role in it.

What is HSS?

HSS was developed as a means of bringing down the cost of SLS parts in order to make 3D printing competitive with mass manufacturing technologies like injection molding. By replacing the costly laser used in SLS and increasing the throughput of the machine, itā€™s possible to sinter parts at a pace and cost that could potentially compete with injection molding.

In HSS, an inkjet printhead deposits a black infrared radiation absorbing ink onto a bed of thermoplastic powder, outlining the desired shape. An infrared lamp then heats the powder, causing the particles to fuse. 

Read more at ENGINEERING.com

By ENGINEERING.com

ENGINEERING.com provides a variety of news and services to the engineering discipline worldwide and publishes a popular online blog focusing on the art of making in the industrial world.