Search for dissertations about: "Additive effect"
Showing result 1 - 5 of 315 swedish dissertations containing the words Additive effect.
-
1. Residual Stress Distributions in Additively Manufactured Parts : Effect of Build Orientation
Abstract : Additive manufacturing (AM) of parts using a layer by layer approach has seen a rapid increase in application for production of net shape or near-net shape complex parts, especially in the field of aerospace, automotive, etc. Due to the superiority of manufacturing complex shapes with ease in comparison to the conventional methods, interest in these kinds of processes has increased. READ MORE
-
2. Residual Stress in Additive Manufacturing : Control using orientation and scan strategies
Abstract : Components with complex features that are designed with their function as a core aspect often are not viable to be manufactured with traditional methods. This has been a bottleneck in the past, leading to heavier parts with various sub-assemblies and a significant waste of material. READ MORE
-
3. Processing–Structure–Properties Relationship in Metal Additive Manufacturing
Abstract : The last three decades have seen the transition of additive manufacturing, from applications exclusively in rapid-prototyping to an emerging production method in the manufacturing industry that is rapidly gaining more relevance. Within additive manufacturing methods, selective laser melting (SLM) is one of the most widely used and mature technologies and is the focus of this thesis. READ MORE
-
4. Additive Manufacturing using Alloy 718 Powder : Influence of Laser Metal Deposition Process Parameters on Microstructural Characteristics
Abstract : Additive manufacturing (AM) is a general name used for production methodswhich have the capabilities of producing components directly from 3D computeraided design (CAD) data by adding material layer-by-layer until a final component is achieved. Included here are powder bed technologies, laminated object manufacturing and deposition technologies. READ MORE
-
5. Models for Additive and Sufficient Cause Interaction
Abstract : The aim of this thesis is to develop and explore models in, and related to, the sufficient cause framework, and additive interaction. Additive interaction is closely connected with public health interventions and can be used to make inferences about the sufficient causes in order to find the mechanisms behind an outcome, for instance a disease. READ MORE