Thermal modeling techniques designed for high-speed directed energy deposition coatings

High-speed directed energy deposition (DED) offers advantages such as efficiency, thin coating layers, and reduced heat-affected zones, making it ideal for repairs and coating on existing parts across various industries. In the DED process, various deposition parameters are included and affect the t...

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Main Authors: Shiho TAKEMURA, Yuichiro MIYATA, Yoko HIRONO, Yasuhiro KAKINUMA
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: The Japan Society of Mechanical Engineers 2025-03-01
Series:Journal of Advanced Mechanical Design, Systems, and Manufacturing
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.jstage.jst.go.jp/article/jamdsm/19/1/19_2025jamdsm0012/_pdf/-char/en
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author Shiho TAKEMURA
Yuichiro MIYATA
Yoko HIRONO
Yasuhiro KAKINUMA
author_facet Shiho TAKEMURA
Yuichiro MIYATA
Yoko HIRONO
Yasuhiro KAKINUMA
author_sort Shiho TAKEMURA
collection DOAJ
description High-speed directed energy deposition (DED) offers advantages such as efficiency, thin coating layers, and reduced heat-affected zones, making it ideal for repairs and coating on existing parts across various industries. In the DED process, various deposition parameters are included and affect the thermal history. Moreover, a thermal history significantly affects the deposit's mechanical properties by varying metallographic structure. Therefore, thermal simulations of DED are highly demanded due to the time and cost challenges associated with experimenting across different process parameters. However, thermal simulations of DED have difficulties because of the process by which material and heat source are supplied from time to time to the melt pool. Many studies have been conducted on thermal simulations of DED, however, few studies focus on high-speed DED coating. Therefore, this research develops the thermal simulation techniques for high-speed DED coating by exploring five simple methods for element addition and heat input. The geometry of the workpiece model was simplified to reduce the simulation cost. Using the Ansys Parametric Design Language (APDL) software and the simplified workpiece model, we conducted thermal simulations and validated them against experimental data acquired from high-speed imaging and two-color temperature measurements. Through these methods, the study proposed the temperature comparison method of experiment and simulation results and identified the suitable method for element addition and heat input in high-speed DED coating that closely replicates the actual temperature within the coating layer. This method reduces the need for finer mesh, effectively lowering computational costs while maintaining accuracy. The findings provide insights into practical simulation practices for DED and contribute to enhancing parameter validation in additive manufacturing simulations, supporting further development in high-speed DED coating technology.
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spelling doaj-art-41c99b435fb84b988e1f5ca171c82f552025-08-20T03:04:20ZengThe Japan Society of Mechanical EngineersJournal of Advanced Mechanical Design, Systems, and Manufacturing1881-30542025-03-01191JAMDSM0012JAMDSM001210.1299/jamdsm.2025jamdsm0012jamdsmThermal modeling techniques designed for high-speed directed energy deposition coatingsShiho TAKEMURA0Yuichiro MIYATA1Yoko HIRONO2Yasuhiro KAKINUMA3Graduate School of Science and Technology, Keio UniversityDMG MORI CO., LTD.DMG MORI CO., LTD.Department of System Desing Engineering, Keio UniversityHigh-speed directed energy deposition (DED) offers advantages such as efficiency, thin coating layers, and reduced heat-affected zones, making it ideal for repairs and coating on existing parts across various industries. In the DED process, various deposition parameters are included and affect the thermal history. Moreover, a thermal history significantly affects the deposit's mechanical properties by varying metallographic structure. Therefore, thermal simulations of DED are highly demanded due to the time and cost challenges associated with experimenting across different process parameters. However, thermal simulations of DED have difficulties because of the process by which material and heat source are supplied from time to time to the melt pool. Many studies have been conducted on thermal simulations of DED, however, few studies focus on high-speed DED coating. Therefore, this research develops the thermal simulation techniques for high-speed DED coating by exploring five simple methods for element addition and heat input. The geometry of the workpiece model was simplified to reduce the simulation cost. Using the Ansys Parametric Design Language (APDL) software and the simplified workpiece model, we conducted thermal simulations and validated them against experimental data acquired from high-speed imaging and two-color temperature measurements. Through these methods, the study proposed the temperature comparison method of experiment and simulation results and identified the suitable method for element addition and heat input in high-speed DED coating that closely replicates the actual temperature within the coating layer. This method reduces the need for finer mesh, effectively lowering computational costs while maintaining accuracy. The findings provide insights into practical simulation practices for DED and contribute to enhancing parameter validation in additive manufacturing simulations, supporting further development in high-speed DED coating technology.https://www.jstage.jst.go.jp/article/jamdsm/19/1/19_2025jamdsm0012/_pdf/-char/enadditive manufacturingdirected energy depositionhigh-speed coatingthermal simulationtwo-color method
spellingShingle Shiho TAKEMURA
Yuichiro MIYATA
Yoko HIRONO
Yasuhiro KAKINUMA
Thermal modeling techniques designed for high-speed directed energy deposition coatings
Journal of Advanced Mechanical Design, Systems, and Manufacturing
additive manufacturing
directed energy deposition
high-speed coating
thermal simulation
two-color method
title Thermal modeling techniques designed for high-speed directed energy deposition coatings
title_full Thermal modeling techniques designed for high-speed directed energy deposition coatings
title_fullStr Thermal modeling techniques designed for high-speed directed energy deposition coatings
title_full_unstemmed Thermal modeling techniques designed for high-speed directed energy deposition coatings
title_short Thermal modeling techniques designed for high-speed directed energy deposition coatings
title_sort thermal modeling techniques designed for high speed directed energy deposition coatings
topic additive manufacturing
directed energy deposition
high-speed coating
thermal simulation
two-color method
url https://www.jstage.jst.go.jp/article/jamdsm/19/1/19_2025jamdsm0012/_pdf/-char/en
work_keys_str_mv AT shihotakemura thermalmodelingtechniquesdesignedforhighspeeddirectedenergydepositioncoatings
AT yuichiromiyata thermalmodelingtechniquesdesignedforhighspeeddirectedenergydepositioncoatings
AT yokohirono thermalmodelingtechniquesdesignedforhighspeeddirectedenergydepositioncoatings
AT yasuhirokakinuma thermalmodelingtechniquesdesignedforhighspeeddirectedenergydepositioncoatings