Print Email Facebook Twitter Damage Tolerant Design for Additive Manufacturing Title Damage Tolerant Design for Additive Manufacturing: An experimental study on the fatigue behaviour of stretch dominated AlSi10Mg multiple load path specimens Author Hofwegen, Mark (TU Delft Aerospace Engineering) Contributor Rans, C.D. (mentor) Pascoe, J.A. (graduation committee) Sinke, J. (graduation committee) Amsterdam, Emiel (graduation committee) Degree granting institution Delft University of Technology Programme Aerospace Engineering Date 2021-03-30 Abstract To expand the use of additive manufacturing in aerospace towards more critical applications, it is required to design parts in a damage tolerant context. Therefore, the damage tolerance of additive manufactured multiple load path structures is assessed by analysing the fatigue life and damage propagation of components with increasing redundancy. An experimental approach is chosen, whereby specimens with 1, 9 and 81 parallel struts are tested. A decreased fatigue life is found for the specimens with more but thinner struts. This decrease is attributed to manufacturing related effects that occur upon producing smaller elements. The failure of the multiple load path structures showed a step-wise pattern. Due to this, the decreased variation in fatigue life and decreased sensitivity to initial damage, multiple load path structures are more damage tolerant. However, in design a balanced decision should be made upon applying these structures, due to the decreased fatigue life. Subject Additive ManufacturingDamage ToleranceFatigueDesign for Additive ManufacturingSLML-PBFGradual failure To reference this document use: http://resolver.tudelft.nl/uuid:52f34a92-8937-4b51-b2e5-8cacfcd24d27 Part of collection Student theses Document type master thesis Rights © 2021 Mark Hofwegen Files PDF Thesis_Final.pdf 19.87 MB Close viewer /islandora/object/uuid:52f34a92-8937-4b51-b2e5-8cacfcd24d27/datastream/OBJ/view