The Metal Additive Manufacturing (AM) Research Facility is now called the Additive Manufacturing Research Center (AMRC).
Additive manufacturing gives U.S. manufacturers a rapid design-to-product capability to make complex, high-value, highly customized parts that are difficult or impossible to make with conventional manufacturing processes. Additive manufacturing systems provide an economic boost to U.S. manufacturers by shortening their product development cycle, increasing the quality and functionality of manufactured parts, enabling “personalized production” of customized manufactured product, and allowing on-demand fabrication of products where and when needed. Technical challenges include limitations in material types, indeterminate and non-uniform mechanical properties of the finished parts, difficult to ascertain process repeatability, insufficient part accuracy and surface finish, lack of consensus protocols and test data for qualification and certification, and underdeveloped non-destructive evaluation methods.
The NIST Additive Manufacturing Research Center (AMRC) is a state-of-the-art facility for conducting measurement science research for metals-based additive manufacturing. NIST research in this facility is focused on developing measurement science solutions for characterizing powders, processes, machines, and manufactured parts, as well as introducing process monitoring and control methods to improve the quality and reproducibility of the parts resulting from the processes.
The AMRC includes three industrial, metal-based AM systems, and space for planned additional machines, in addition to various consumer-level 3D printers, data processing computers, and attached conference room. These systems fabricate parts from metal powders using two different additive manufacturing processes: two systems use Laser-based Powder Bed Fusion (LB-PBF) and one uses Laser-based Directed Energy Deposition (LB-DED). Together, these machines support NIST research by providing an array of processing technologies that are representative of many of those used by industry today.
The Engineering Laboratory at NIST maintains multiple other laboratories and systems dedicated to additive manufacturing research in addition to those in the AMRC. These include the Additive Manufacturing Metrology Testbed, powder characterization laboratory, surface metrology laboratory, metallography laboratory, as well as heat-treat, EDM, and CNC part finishing capabilities. Further information about the research of the Measurement Science for Additive Manufacturing (MSAM) program of the NIST Engineering Laboratory can be found here.