ExOne and Abbott utilise continuous furnaces for the sintering of aluminium binder jet parts
June 21, 2021

The ExOne Company, North Huntingdon, Pennsylvania, USA, and Abbott Furnace Company, St Marys, Pennsylvania, USA, have announced that they are collaborating on the use of continuous furnaces for the sintering of aluminium in high-volume binder jet applications.
While most Binder Jetting (BJT) Additive Manufacturing systems sold today are paired with a batch sintering furnace, ExOne found, with Abbott’s assistance, that Al 6061 preferred a continuous furnace – the very type that would be advantageous in high-volume production.
Abbott Furnace Company and Stephen Feldbauer, PhD, Director, Research and Development at Abbott, are said to have played a key supporting role in advocating new approaches to optimise the Binder Jetting of Al 6061 and make it more production-friendly.
“The use of a continuous furnace turned out to be a key element of our patent-pending approach,” stated Rick Lucas, Chief Technology Officer and VP, New Markets, ExOne. “In our roadmap, 6061 aluminium was always the peak. It’s the most commonly used aluminium in the world; it’s what manufacturers want. But it’s also the most challenging to print and sinter. A lot of great minds came together to make this happen, building on decades of foundational work.”
Sintering bound-powder aluminium parts to high densities have been a well-known challenge for decades. While bound aluminium parts can be sintered to lower densities, Feldbauer explained, the metal powder market has been trying to develop a method to successfully deliver high densities and strengths.
So, while both powder metal and BJT could bind aluminium particles into a precision ‘green’ form, neither had found a reliable way to sinter these forms to high densities while retaining shape and properties.
When Feldbauer looked at a micrograph of ExOne’s recent work on the Additive Manufacturing and sintering of Al 6061 with other furnace approaches, he saw enough progress had been made by ExOne to deliver what others had struggled to for so many years. “Steve was very positive this would work,” Lucas recalled. “It’s largely about the gas flow over the part.”
Like a forensic scientist, Feldbauer, who also teaches Powder Metallurgy processing at Penn State, saw the micrograph and could tell exactly what challenges were occurring and had a good idea of how to fix them. “I teach sintering in applied materials. I teach powder metal processing,” he explained. “I was able to draw on my experience.”
Abbott’s continuous furnaces, such as the Vulcan Delube System, specialises in removing binders or lubricants from powder metal and binder jet parts efficiently and ‘cleaning’ the parts through several chambers of tightly controlled atmospheres and thermal profiles.
“Aluminium wants to oxidise so easily,” Feldbauer explained. “We’re printing and sintering it and controlling that. That ability to control atmosphere in sintering is really what sets Abbott apart worldwide. To process continuously and to have very tight control of the atmosphere.”
Today, ExOne and Abbott can deliver high density repeatable results in Al 6061.
“We are way ahead of anyone else in the world in printing and sintering to the quality we’re producing,” Feldbauer added. “What makes this process exceptionally challenging is that we’re trying to achieve such a high density and not distort the product.”
Feldbauer likened it to trying to keep a metal particle from melting during sintering into a rounded droplet and, instead, keeping it square like a volumetric pixel – while, at the same time, removing binders and preventing oxidation.
He said the developments around the recent AL 6061 achievement will transform manufacturing in important ways, delivering more lightweight geometries in aluminium that are important to the automotive, aerospace and other industries.
“One of the things that this project really highlights is the importance of binder jet printing and sintering as a process in additive,” Feldbauer continued. “For many, many years, binder jet hasn’t been viewed as favourably as electron beam or laser, but what we’re demonstrating here is we can print a material with equivalent quality that cannot be made by welding with a laser or EBAM. Not only can we make it, we can do it in high volume. Without the ability to maintain high quality and high volume in sintering, this market was forced to be a niche market.”
“We’ve broken that barrier. Now, we’re actually offering a competitive process to high-volume production of high-quality parts,” he concluded.