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Design Concepts and Performance Characterization of Heat Pipe Wick Structures by LPBF Additive Manufacturing.

Konstantin KappeMichael BihlerKatharina MorawietzPhilipp P C HügenellAron PfaffKlaus Hoschke
Published in: Materials (Basel, Switzerland) (2022)
Additive manufacturing offers a wide range of possibilities for the design and optimization of lightweight and application-tailored structures. The great design freedom of the Laser Powder Bed Fusion (LPBF) manufacturing process enables new design and production concepts for heat pipes and their internal wick structures, using various metallic materials. This allows an increase in heat pipe performance and a direct integration into complex load-bearing structures. An important influencing factor on the heat pipe performance is the internal wick structures. The complex and filigree geometry of such structures is challenging in regards to providing high manufacturing quality at a small scale and varying orientations during the printing process. In this work, new wick concepts have been developed, where the design was either determined by the geometrical parameters, the process parameters, or their combination. The wick samples were additively manufactured with LPBF technology using the lightweight aluminum alloy Scalmalloy ® . The influence of the process parameters, geometrical design, and printing direction was investigated by optical microscopy, and the characteristic wick performance parameters were determined by porosimetry and rate-of-rise measurements. They showed promising results for various novel wick concepts and indicated that additive manufacturing could be a powerful manufacturing method to further increase the performance and flexibility of heat pipes.
Keyphrases
  • high resolution
  • heat stress
  • high speed
  • high throughput
  • mass spectrometry
  • single molecule
  • atomic force microscopy
  • tissue engineering