Metal powders can be consolidated into a solid mass using an electron beam as the heat source. Parts are manufactured by melting metal powder, layer by layer, with an electron beam in a high vacuum. This
powder bed method produces fully dense metal parts directly from metal powder with characteristics of the target material. The EBM machine reads data from a 3D CAD model and lays down successive layers of powdered material. These layers are melted together utilizing a computer-controlled electron beam. In this way it builds up the parts. The process takes place under vacuum, which makes it suited to manufacture parts in reactive materials with a high affinity for oxygen, e.g. titanium. The process is known to operate at higher temperatures (up to 1000 °C), which can lead to differences in phase formation though
solidification and
solid-state phase transformation. The powder feedstock is typically pre-alloyed, as opposed to a mixture. That aspect allows classification of EBM with
selective laser melting (SLM), where competing technologies like
SLS and
DMLS require thermal treatment after fabrication. Compared to SLM and DMLS, EBM has a generally superior build rate because of its higher energy density and scanning method. File:Arcam_S12.jpg|Arcam S12 File:Arcam_A2.jpg|Arcam A2 File:Arcam_Q10.jpg|Arcam Q10 File:Arcam_Powder_Recovery_System.jpg|Metal powder recovery system
Research developments Recent work has been published by
ORNL, demonstrating the use of EBM technology to control local
crystallographic grain orientations in
Inconel. After testing in the transmission electron microscope by the state-of-the-art in-situ technique, the EBM Inconel alloy has been proved to exhibit similar mechanical property comparing to a wrought Inconel alloy. Numerous investigations have been conducted in recent times, exploring the microstructure and characteristics of various steel grades (including austenitic, martensitic, dual-phase, and ferritic) tailored for EBM process. Other notable developments have focused on the development of process parameters to produce parts out of alloys such as
copper,
niobium,
Al 2024,
bulk metallic glass,
stainless steel, and
titanium aluminide. Currently commercial materials for EBM include
commercially pure Titanium,
Ti-6Al-4V,
CoCr,
Inconel 718, and
Inconel 625. ==Metal wire-based systems==