skills/smithery.ai/additive-manufacturing

additive-manufacturing

SKILL.md

Additive Manufacturing Skill

Purpose

The Additive Manufacturing skill provides capabilities for AM process selection, design optimization, and build preparation, enabling effective use of additive technologies for prototyping and production applications.

Capabilities

  • AM technology selection (SLS, DMLS, FDM, SLA)
  • Design for additive manufacturing (DfAM)
  • Build orientation optimization
  • Support structure design and minimization
  • Part nesting and build volume optimization
  • Post-processing procedure specification
  • Surface finish and tolerance expectations
  • AM-specific material properties and considerations

Usage Guidelines

Technology Selection

Metal AM Processes

Process Materials Resolution Applications
DMLS/SLM Ti, Al, Steel, Inconel 30-50 um layer Aerospace, medical
EBM Ti, CoCr 50-100 um layer Orthopedic implants
DED Most metals 250+ um Large parts, repair
Binder Jet Steel, bronze 80-100 um Tooling, high volume

Polymer AM Processes

Process Materials Resolution Applications
SLS Nylon, TPU 100-150 um Functional prototypes
SLA/DLP Photopolymers 25-100 um High detail, patterns
FDM ABS, PLA, PC, PEEK 100-300 um Prototypes, tooling
MJF Nylon 80 um Production parts

Design for Additive Manufacturing

Self-Supporting Angles

Minimum self-supporting angle:
- Metal (DMLS): 45 degrees from horizontal
- Polymer (SLS): 0 degrees (self-supporting)
- FDM: 45 degrees (with support)
- SLA: 30-45 degrees

Overhang rule:
- Unsupported distance < 2 mm (metal)
- Unsupported distance < 5 mm (polymer)

Minimum Feature Sizes

Process Min Wall Min Hole Min Detail
DMLS 0.4 mm 0.5 mm 0.2 mm
SLS 0.7 mm 1.0 mm 0.3 mm
SLA 0.5 mm 0.5 mm 0.1 mm
FDM 0.8 mm 2.0 mm 0.5 mm

Design Optimization

  1. Topology Optimization

    • Define design space
    • Apply loads and constraints
    • Set mass reduction target
    • Interpret and refine results
  2. Lattice Structures

    Type Relative Density Application
    Octet truss 10-40% High stiffness
    Diamond 15-35% Isotropic
    Gyroid 10-50% Bone ingrowth
    Honeycomb 20-50% Directional load
  3. Part Consolidation

    • Identify assembly candidates
    • Evaluate function integration
    • Consider serviceability
    • Calculate cost/benefit

Build Preparation

Orientation Selection

Optimization criteria:
1. Minimize support volume
2. Optimize surface finish on critical surfaces
3. Reduce build height (time)
4. Ensure feature accuracy

Trade-off example:
- Flat orientation: Less support, rougher top surface
- Angled orientation: More support, better detail

Support Design

  1. Support Types

    Type Application Removal
    Block Large overhangs Manual/machining
    Tree Complex geometry Manual
    Lattice Heat dissipation Manual
    Cone Point supports Manual
  2. Support Minimization

    • Reorient part
    • Add self-supporting chamfers
    • Split and assemble
    • Modify geometry if allowed

Nesting and Packing

Minimum spacing:
- DMLS: 2-5 mm between parts
- SLS: 2-3 mm (powder acts as support)
- FDM: N/A (single part builds)
- SLA: 2-3 mm

Packing efficiency target: 5-15% of build volume

Post-Processing

Metal AM

  1. Required

    • Stress relief (before removal)
    • Support removal
    • Heat treatment (as specified)
  2. Optional

    • Machining critical surfaces
    • Shot peening
    • Polishing/finishing
    • HIP (for porosity closure)

Polymer AM

  1. SLS/MJF

    • Depowder and clean
    • Dye or paint (optional)
    • Sealing (if required)
  2. SLA/DLP

    • Wash (IPA or solvent)
    • UV post-cure
    • Support removal
    • Sanding/finishing

Process Integration

  • ME-019: Additive Manufacturing Process Development

Input Schema

{
  "part_model": "CAD file reference",
  "material_requirement": {
    "type": "metal|polymer",
    "specific": "string (e.g., Ti6Al4V, Nylon 12)",
    "properties": "strength|stiffness|temperature|biocompatible"
  },
  "quantity": "number",
  "quality_requirements": {
    "tolerance": "number (mm)",
    "surface_finish": "string",
    "critical_features": "array"
  },
  "timeline": "prototype|production",
  "budget_constraint": "number (optional)"
}

Output Schema

{
  "process_recommendation": {
    "technology": "string",
    "material": "string",
    "machine": "string (if specific)"
  },
  "build_preparation": {
    "orientation": "description and rationale",
    "support_volume": "number (cm3)",
    "build_time": "number (hours)",
    "material_usage": "number (kg)"
  },
  "dfam_recommendations": [
    {
      "feature": "string",
      "issue": "string",
      "recommendation": "string"
    }
  ],
  "post_processing": "array of steps",
  "cost_estimate": {
    "material": "number",
    "machine_time": "number",
    "post_processing": "number",
    "total": "number"
  }
}

Best Practices

  1. Design for AM from the start, not as afterthought
  2. Understand process limitations before design
  3. Optimize orientation for quality, not just time
  4. Plan for post-processing in design stage
  5. Validate material properties for application
  6. Consider total cost including post-processing

Integration Points

  • Connects with CAD Modeling for geometry
  • Feeds into Material Testing for property validation
  • Supports DFM Review for manufacturability
  • Integrates with FAI Inspection for quality
Weekly Installs
4
First Seen
8 days ago
Installed on
qwen-code4