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Interests => The Science Club => Topic started by: Thor on November 25, 2009, 01:09:45 PM

Title: Star Trek-Like Replicator?
Post by: Thor on November 25, 2009, 01:09:45 PM
Quote
Star Trek-Like Replicator? Electron Beam Device Makes Metal Parts, One Layer At A Time

ScienceDaily (Nov. 11, 2009) — A group of engineers working on a novel manufacturing technique at NASA's Langley Research Center in Hampton, Va., have come up with a new twist on the popular old saying about dreaming and doing: "If you can slice it, we can build it."

That's because layers mean everything to the environmentally-friendly construction process called Electron Beam Freeform Fabrication, or EBF3, and its operation sounds like something straight out of science fiction.

"You start with a drawing of the part you want to build, you push a button, and out comes the part," said Karen Taminger, the technology lead for the Virginia-based research project that is part of NASA's Fundamental Aeronautics Program.

She admits that, on the surface, EBF3 reminds many people of a Star Trek replicator in which, for example, Captain Picard announces out loud, "Tea, Earl Grey, hot." Then there is a brief hum, a flash of light and the stimulating drink appears from a nook in the wall.

In reality, EBF3 works in a vacuum chamber, where an electron beam is focused on a constantly feeding source of metal, which is melted and then applied as called for by a drawing -- one layer at a time -- on top of a rotating surface until the part is complete.

While the options for using EBF3 are more limited than what science fiction allows, the potential for the process is no less out of this world, with promising relevance in aviation, spaceflight -- even the medical community, Taminger said.

Commercial applications for EBF3 are already known and its potential already tested, Taminger said, noting it's possible that, within a few years, some aircraft will be flying with large structural parts made by this process.

To make EBF3 work there are two key requirements: A detailed three-dimensional drawing of the object to be created must be available, and the material the object is to be made from must be compatible for use with an electron beam.

First, the drawing is needed to break up the object into layers, with each cross-section used to guide the electron beam and source of metal in reproducing the object, building it up layer by layer.

"If you take a slice through a typical truss, you can see a couple of dots in each cross-section that move as you go from layer to layer," Taminger said. "When complete, you see those moving dots actually allowed you to build a diagonal brace into the truss."

Second, the material must be compatible with the electron beam so that it can be heated by the stream of energy and briefly turned into liquid form, making aluminum an ideal material to be used, along with other metals.

In fact, the EBF3 can handle two different sources of metal -- also called feed stock -- at the same time, either by mixing them together into a unique alloy or embedding one material inside another.

The potential use for the latter could include embedding a strand of fiber optic glass inside an aluminum part, enabling the placement of sensors in areas that were impossible before, Taminger said.

While the EBF3 equipment tested on the ground is fairly large and heavy, a smaller version was created and successfully test flown on a NASA jet that is used to provide researchers with brief periods of weightlessness. The next step is to fly a demonstration of the hardware on the International Space Station, Taminger said.

Future lunar base crews could use EBF3 to manufacture spare parts as needed, rather than rely on a supply of parts launched from Earth. Astronauts might be able to mine feed stock from the lunar soil, or even recycle used landing craft stages by melting them.

But the immediate and greatest potential for the process is in the aviation industry where major structural segments of an airliner, or casings for a jet engine, could be manufactured for about $1,000 per pound less than conventional means, Taminger said.

Environmental savings also are made possible by deploying EBF3, she added.

Normally an aircraft builder might start with a 6,000-pound block of titanium and machine it down to a 300-pound part, leaving 5,700 pounds of material that needs to be recycled and using several thousand gallons of cutting fluid used in the process..

"With EBF3 you can build up the same part using only 350 pounds of titanium and machine away just 50 pounds to get the part into its final configuration," Taminger said. "And the EBF3 process uses much less electricity to create the same part."

While initial parts for the aviation industry will be simple shapes, replacing parts already designed, future parts designed from scratch with the EBF3 process in mind could lead to improvements in jet engine efficiency, fuel burn rate and component lifetime.

"There's a lot of power in being able to build up your part layer by layer because you can get internal cavities and complexities that are not possible with machining from a solid block of material," Taminger said.

http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2009/11/091110071535.htm
Title: Re: Star Trek-Like Replicator?
Post by: thundley4 on November 25, 2009, 02:35:12 PM
Haven't they had something similar, but done with a "printer" for manufacturing 3-D products from plastic?
Title: Re: Star Trek-Like Replicator?
Post by: Thor on November 26, 2009, 12:27:10 PM
:clueless:
Title: Re: Star Trek-Like Replicator?
Post by: djones520 on November 26, 2009, 12:32:39 PM
Haven't they had something similar, but done with a "printer" for manufacturing 3-D products from plastic?

Yeah, I think so.  But plastic and metal are two completely differant beasts.
Title: Re: Star Trek-Like Replicator?
Post by: Crazy Horse on December 14, 2009, 08:15:59 PM
Haven't they had something similar, but done with a "printer" for manufacturing 3-D products from plastic?

Yes and there are things that will scan parts also for models.
Title: Re: Star Trek-Like Replicator?
Post by: bkg on December 14, 2009, 08:18:38 PM
Haven't they had something similar, but done with a "printer" for manufacturing 3-D products from plastic?

Yes. Buddy works at SporTech and they have a 3-D printer that they use for prototyping.. Same concept, but in plastic. Been around for years.

IIRC, they threw a Matchbox car in the scanner and had a plastic replica not too long later.

True, metal is different, but the concept effectively the same. Evolutionary, not revolutionary.
Title: Re: Star Trek-Like Replicator?
Post by: Freeper on December 19, 2009, 03:43:55 PM
Can we replicate Ronald Reagan? God knows the world could use him now.
Title: Re: Star Trek-Like Replicator?
Post by: The Village Idiot on December 19, 2009, 04:00:27 PM
Haven't they had something similar, but done with a "printer" for manufacturing 3-D products from plastic?

I think they can make proto-type plastic things from a tank of some gel that when two beams cross make them solid.

Just prototypes I think.
Title: Re: Star Trek-Like Replicator?
Post by: jinxmchue on January 24, 2010, 12:10:53 AM
Quote
"You start with a drawing of the part you want to build, you push a button, and out comes the part," said Karen Taminger, the technology lead for the Virginia-based research project that is part of NASA's Fundamental Aeronautics Program.

She admits that, on the surface, EBF3 reminds many people of a Star Trek replicator in which, for example, Captain Picard announces out loud, "Tea, Earl Grey, hot." Then there is a brief hum, a flash of light and the stimulating drink appears from a nook in the wall.

In reality, EBF3 works in a vacuum chamber, where an electron beam is focused on a constantly feeding source of metal, which is melted and then applied as called for by a drawing -- one layer at a time -- on top of a rotating surface until the part is complete.

So then it's really not at all like a Star Trek replicator, which uses transporter-like technology to make raw energy form into physical objects, and they're just upping the hype on the device by tenebrously linking it to Star Trek.
Title: Re: Star Trek-Like Replicator?
Post by: The Village Idiot on January 24, 2010, 12:24:44 AM
I remember an interesting news story called "The Machine That Invents". I wonder if its online still, probably worth looking for if I wasn't so lazy.
Title: Re: Star Trek-Like Replicator?
Post by: Chris on January 24, 2010, 03:04:20 AM
So then it's really not at all like a Star Trek replicator, which uses transporter-like technology to make raw energy form into physical objects, and they're just upping the hype on the device by tenebrously linking it to Star Trek.

Touche :rofl: