Additive Users Guide Print and Science
Additive Users Guide Print and Science
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Additive User's Guide (Print and Science)
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Introduction
Welcome to ANSYS Additive
ANSYS Additive is simulation software dedicated to the field of metal additive manufacturing. Offerings
include:
• Additive Print – a tool for machine operators to perform quick simulations of parts to ensure they will
print successfully (included with Additive Print and Additive Suite licenses).
• Additive Science – an exploratory environment for scientists to determine the optimum process
parameters for their machines and materials (included with Additive Suite licenses).
This user's guide is intended for all users of ANSYS Additive. Explanations of capabilities available only
in Additive Science are clearly identified.
The Additive application simulates the layer-by-layer build process of metal parts undergoing Laser
Powder Bed Fusion (L-PBF), a type of additive manufacturing that uses a laser to melt or fuse material
powder together. As each layer is processed, the region under the laser experiences extremely intense,
local heat that cools rapidly and results in thermal distortion. The simulation method uses a layer by
layer accumulation of inherent strain to predict this distortion. As a user, you will gain critical insight
into the complex physics-based phenomena associated with this layering process.
Simulating the build process may be performed at various points in the overall design/manufacturing
process depending on your goals. Additive generates practical solutions to residual stress, distortion,
and build failure, enabling you to:
• Improve Product Design – In complicated, asymmetrical parts, shrinkage and distortion due to rapid
heating and cooling during the 3D printing process may result in components outside of tolerances.
Simulations of the build process show magnitudes and locations of part distortion. Designers can quickly
make design changes to assure part conformance without iterations of trial and error builds.
• Inform Build Preparation – Instead of building several part prototypes in different orientations on the
build plate, simulations of these orientations reveal best orientation in a fraction of the time and expense.
• Validate Build Preparation – Parts designed using powerful topology optimization tools result in complex
and intricate shapes that present difficult challenges on where to place supports required for build.
Simulations in Additive include the generation of optimized support structures using predicted residual
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Welcome to ANSYS Additive
stress accumulation as criteria for support placement and thickness. Engineers can use the optimized
support information in their production builds to reduce build failures due to insufficient supports.
Simulations accurately predict part distortion during the build. Additive’s Distortion Compensation
feature takes that information a step further and automatically creates a distortion compensated geo-
metry, essentially reversing distortion effects. Engineers can use the compensated geometry file in their
production builds and be assured of a final part that conforms to design intent.
2. Set Up a Simulation
3. Run a Simulation
Depending on your simulation goals, you may need to run multiple iterations of this four-step process.
Also, before beginning a simulation for the first time, you should run a series of calibrations to determine
input factors that take unique aspects of your machine and material into consideration. The calibration
procedures and parts are available online here. Note that the calibration procedure may continue to
evolve as we work with more machine partners and key customers.
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Understanding the Additive Interface
The Additive interface is quite simple and straightforward. It includes a simulation dashboard in the
main portion of the window and resource libraries on the left. Clicking on the ANSYS logo ( )
from anywhere in the program takes you back to the simulation dashboard.
Resource libraries are repositories for parts, build files, and materials. The first step in the simulation
process, prepare and import a part, involves importing a part into the Parts Library (or the Build File
Library if you have a build file).
The dashboard shows your most recent simulations organized from left to right as Draft Simulations,
Running Simulations, and Completed Simulations. This structure parallels the next steps in the simulation
process; set up a simulation, run a simulation, and review results of a simulation. Draft simulations are
simply saved simulation forms that have not been run as simulations yet.
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Understanding the Additive Interface
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Managing Your Simulations and Data
Save: Clicking the Save button under Draft Simulations saves your simulation form internally (but not
as a file on your computer) and you will see it listed under Draft Simulations. It is removed from Draft
Simulations when you start a simulation (i.e., when it is no longer a “draft”). All your input options are
stored when you run a simulation so that you may see your options at any time when you click on a
simulation in the Running Simulations and Completed Simulation areas of the dashboard. Use Export
to save your simulation form to a file.
Start: Click Start under Draft Simulations to start execution of a simulation. At this point, the simulation
is removed from Draft Simulations and is shown under Running Simulations.
Cancel: Clicking the Cancel button under Running Simulations stops the simulation. (It takes a moment
for the processes to stop.) After canceling a simulation, you’ll see it as canceled under the Completed
Simulations list and you can Restart the simulation again with the Restart button.
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Understanding the Additive Interface
Restart: Click Restart under Completed Simulations to restart a canceled or interrupted simulation. (If
you need to change an input value, click on Duplicate, at which point you will need to start the simu-
lation from the beginning again.)
Duplicate: Clicking Duplicate from any point in the application makes a copy of the inputs of that
simulation and creates a Draft simulation of the same name with those inputs. If you are working in
Draft Simulations, a Save is required before you can Duplicate.
Export Simulation: Clicking Export Simulation brings up your file manager so you can save simulation
form inputs to an .aasp file. This proprietary file format contains simulation input data that can be im-
ported into ANSYS Additive. Your geometry selection (i.e., part) and simulation results are not included
on the .aasp file. If you are working in Draft Simulations, a Save is required before you can Export.
Import: Click Import on the dashboard to bring up the file manager and load an .aasp file. This action
will populate a new simulation form with saved inputs. Note that the part is not included in saved inputs
and will need to be added to the simulation form.
Delete: Clicking the Delete button from either Draft Simulations or Completed Simulations removes
the simulation from the application. The operation will delete all metadata and output files. Data will
be permanently deleted and is not recoverable.
Save Logs: The Save Logs button under Completed Simulations is needed only if you have a problem
with your simulation and you need to contact customer support for a resolution. Clicking Save Logs
brings up your file manager and allows you to write a zipped file containing files used for diagnostic
purposes. Contact us at the ANSYS Customer Portal.
Customize: Clicking Customize under the details of a material page will allow you to edit properties
to define your own custom material to store in the Materials Library. Your custom material will then
appear as an option when selecting a material for a simulation.
Archive: Clicking Archive under the custom material page will remove a customized material from the
Materials Library. Simulations using these materials will remain in your stored application data.
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Managing Your Simulations and Data
changes to the data directories will not take effect until after you've restarted. If you already have
data (completed simulations, parts, supports, materials, etc.), it will not be copied over to the new
location. It will remain in the old directory, but you won't be able to access it from the application
unless you switch back.
You can reset the directories to the default factory settings by clicking "Reset to Default".
Known Limitations
ANSYS Additive does not support installation across a network so AppData must be local to your
computer. Do not specify a network drive.
2. Change your application data folder. (The new folder should be empty.)
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Understanding the Additive Interface
5. Copy the entire contents of the folder (cassandraBinaries, cassandraData, database, logs, minio,
minioConfig).
7. Paste the contents of the old folder into the new folder.
You can reduce the likelihood of experiencing black screen errors by increasing the maximum memory
consumption for the UI. Do this by changing the target path for the launch shortcut to "C:\Program
Files\ANSYS Inc\v201\AddPrint\ANSYS Additive 20.1.exe" --js-flags="--max-old-space-size=8192" (where
v201 and "20.1" are references to the particular release of ANSYS Additive, in this case 2020 R1).
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Managing Your Simulations and Data
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Understanding the Additive Interface
If run with a single thread, the results between successive runs with identical inputs should produce
identical outputs.
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Choosing a Simulation Type
From the dashboard, click the New dropdown box to choose a new form corresponding to a simulation
type.
There are three types of simulations available in Additive Print; Assumed Strain Simulation, Scan Pattern
Simulation, and Thermal Strain Simulation. The simulation types (sometimes called strain modes) specify
the different ways inherent strain is calculated as an input to the Mechanics Solver. All three strain
modes offer the same simulation output options.
There are four types of simulations available in Additive Science; Single Bead, Porosity, Thermal History,
and Microstructure (Thermal History and Microstructure simulation types are Beta features at this release).
The goal of Additive Science is to determine the best process-parameter combination to use for building
your part, given a L-PBF machine and a material. You begin this exploration with a Single Bead Parametric
Simulation to narrow the process-parameter combinations down to a smaller number of acceptable
candidates based upon melt pool dimensions. Typically you will then want to do a Porosity Simulation
using your chosen parameters from the Single Bead simulation to determine the lack-of-fusion porosity
associated with those process parameters.
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Choosing a Simulation Type
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Thermal Strain - Anisotropic
The Strain Scaling Factor (SSF) is an important factor quantifying the variables unique to each build
scenario. It must be experimentally determined for each machine/material/strain/stress mode combination
of interest. Calibration procedures are available online here.
Except indirectly through the use of the experimentally determined calibration factor (SSF), an Assumed
Strain Simulation does not use information about the machine or scan pattern.
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Understanding Machine Parameters
There are several standard machine parameters, also known as process parameters, used in Additive
simulations. Each simulation (except the Assumed Strain simulation) uses some, or all, of these parameters.
The machine parameters are shown in the following figure and are listed here for your reference.
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Understanding Machine Parameters
Baseplate Temperature ( °C )
The controlled temperature of the baseplate. Must be a real number between 0 and 200. Defaults to
80 °C.
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Additive Print
Prepare and Import a Part (p. 21)
• Only one part can be simulated. There can be multiple bodies, but they have to be on the same part.
• Do not include supports in the part geometry file. You will have an opportunity to import supports
separately or have the Additive application create supports automatically for the part. If you have de-
signed supports along with the part, keep them as separate bodies and save them to a separate file.
• Do not include a baseplate (build plate) in the part geometry file. The Additive application takes the
baseplate into consideration internally in the simulation and it never needs to be explicitly modeled.
• Dimensions of the part must be in units of millimeters (mm). While .stl files are unitless, the Additive
application does not provide the ability to switch unit systems and Metric units of millimeters are as-
sumed.
• Currently, build size is limited to one cubic meter, that is, 1000 millimeters in all directions (1000 x 1000
x 1000 mm). "Build size" includes the part and the supports. Be aware that the larger the part, the
greater the memory required for solution.
• The .stl file must have the part positioned in the orientation in which it will be printed.
• A part with its longest dimension in the Z direction will require the longest simulation time. While the
domain volume doesn’t change with part orientation, the number of voxel layers changes, which means
more calculations in the solver are being performed. Alternatively, a part with the smallest dimension
in the Z direction will have the shortest simulation time. (Note that parts oriented with their longest
dimension in the Z direction will similarly take longer to print on the machine because more layers are
required. Powder recoating/spreading time is an order of magnitude higher than laser printing time.)
• The time required to slice and voxelize an .stl file exponentially increases with the number of triangles.
Given two .stl files for the same geometry, the file with the smallest number of triangles will be processed
faster. (Slicing, as used here, refers to the internal process of dividing a part into scan vectors according
to the scan pattern input parameters that will be used in the 3D build process. Voxelization refers to
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Prepare and Import a Part
the dividing of a part into voxels, or elements, used in the mathematical simulation. See Voxel
Size (p. 34).)
Importing a Part
To import a part to the Parts Library, click the Parts button in the left panel of the dashboard
and then click Import Part. Part files are .stl files, either ascii or binary. While .stl files are unitless, dimen-
sions of the part in Additive are assumed to be in units of millimeters (mm).
The name, tags, and description fields allow you to identify the part in some way that makes logical
sense to you. These fields are searchable at any location in the program that allows for searching on
text fields. Tags should be at least three characters long.
When you import a part, the Additive application internally creates a bounding box around the part
using the outermost edges of its dimensions. This bounding box is known as the domain. Furthermore,
the location of the minimum X, Y, and Z dimensions becomes the new origin (0, 0, 0) for the purposes
of calculations. Result items, such as displacements, will be output in coordinates based on this translated
origin.
It may take a few minutes to import a part, depending on the size of the file. The status indication in
the Parts Library shows “Processing” while the part is importing and “Available” when importing is
complete. A common practice is to import the part and then begin setting up your simulation. When
you get to the step of selecting geometry on the simulation form, the part is usually available for selec-
tion.
If you want to see details about a part that has already been imported, you may view it in the Parts
Library by clicking on it or searching on any text term used in the name, tags, or description of the part.
Click the part name to bring up a details page with information and an image preview of that part. Use
your mouse buttons to move the part around in the image preview; left button for spin, middle for
zoom, and right button for pan. Click Edit to edit the name, tags, or description. You cannot edit the
features of the geometry itself. (Note that if the original .stl file is changed, it does not affect the imported
part. A new copy is made inside the application that is not linked to the original file.)
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Importing Supports
Importing Supports
Once a part is available after importing, you can import supports that will be associated with that part.
Click Import Support to bring up the import support window.
See Define Support Options (p. 40) for general information about how supports are used in the additive
manufacturing process. For now, it is important to know the following:
• The support must be oriented in the same 3D space as the part (aligned with the part in the X-Y plane).
• Each support .stl file must be homogeneous with respect to its geometry, that is, either all volumeless supports
or all solid supports, within the file. See Support STL Type (p. 24).
• There is no limit on the number of support .stl files that can be imported for any given part.
• Create Support Groups (p. 25) to use multiple support .stl files for the same part in a simulation.
If a support is a part-to-part only support (i.e., no portion of the support structure touches the baseplate),
this check box must be checked to ensure proper alignment. If some segment of the support does
touch the baseplate and the support and part are aligned in X, Y, and Z, this feature will automatically
calculate the proper Minimum Support Height.
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Prepare and Import a Part
When this check box is checked, the Minimum Support Height input is disabled since that value will
be calculated automatically.
It is important to be sure the supports and the part are properly aligned in the X and Y axes before
importing. The correct Minimum Support Height ensures that the part and support are properly aligned
in the Z axis at simulation time. Just as the part's origin is translated to a new origin based on the domain
(i.e., bounding box), the bounding box is expanded to account for the supports and the origin is
translated accordingly upon import.
Volumeless STL: These supports are usually single-bead width support walls such as lattice supports.
These structures do not need to be "watertight." Other names for this type include thin wall, vector,
and facet.
Solid STL: These supports are standard, watertight geometry bodies. Other names for this type include
thick wall, bulk, and volume.
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Importing a Build File
To import another support for the same part, simply click Import Support again and go through the
same process to import the new file. Use the Preview check box for each support to confirm its location
with respect to the part. Note that you can preview only one support at a time using the Preview check
box.
Support Groups
To use multiple supports .stl files in a single simulation, you must first create a support group. You can
mix support .stl types, that is, volumeless supports and solid supports, in a support group. There is no
limit to the number of supports a support group can contain, but supports can be in the same group
only under these conditions:
• The Minimum Support Height is zero and the support is locked to the part.
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Prepare and Import a Part
a Beta feature at this release. ANSYS may add additional options as we continue to work with more
machine partners.
Machine-specific requirements are documented in the following sections but here are the general re-
quirements for build files:
• One or more supports may be included as separate .stl files. Support file names are required to have a
suffix indicating their support .stl type (p. 24), either volumeless ("*_vless.stl") or solid ("*_solid.stl"); for
example, supports _at_holes_vless.stl, supports_at_overhang_vless.stl, supports_at_arch_solid.stl, etc.
All the supports included in the build file will be used in your simulation if you choose to use the build
file supports.
– One laser head is assumed for the simulation. Multi-laser build files are not supported. If you import
a build file that includes multiple lasers, how it is handled in the application is machine-specific. In
most cases the application either produces an error on import or ignores the extra lasers.
– One set of process parameters is used in the simulation. If multiple parameter sets are included in
the build file, say different scan speeds and laser powers for the part hatches versus the support
hatches, the part hatch parameters will override. When running thermal simulations, parameters
under Machine Configuration (p. 80) in the simulation form override.
– The scan sequence is always simulated from the inside out, that is, from hatch to contour scans, re-
gardless of how they are defined in the build file. The appropriate order is maintained within the
hatch area and within a contour, however. For example, if the build file order is: contour line 1 →
contour line 2 → hatch line 1 → hatch line 2, it will be changed to be hatch line 1 → hatch line 2 →
contour line 1 → contour line 2.
– Scan vectors marked as contour will not be simulated in simulations that perform a full thermal
solution (Thermal Strain and Thermal History simulation types). The definition of contour/hatch is
established by the software that creates the build file. If contour-like scan vectors are marked as hatch
they will be simulated and results may not be as expected.
Build files from ANSYS Additive Prep are automatically created with a file name of "ansys_addit-
ive_print.zip.
To import a .zip file to the Build Files Library, click the Build Files button in the left panel of the
dashboard and then click Import Build File. When you select Build File Type, you are specifying which
of the approved translators Additive will use when reading the data.
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Importing a Build File
Note:
A build file may contain scan vectors that exceed the part geometry boundaries. Because
the Mechanics Solver uses voxels based upon the part geometry, strains resulting from the
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Prepare and Import a Part
portion of scan lines exceeding part boundaries may not be included in the stress calculation.
This depends upon the amount by which scan vectors extend beyond the part boundaries.
See the discussion of Voxel Sample Rate (p. 36).
• Support = *_vless.stl and/or *_solid.stl file(s), optional, but supports will not be simulated
• Two machine files are required, one *.daij file and one *.bin file.
Notes:
• Support scan vectors will be ignored and will not be simulated. An Additive Industries build file with
supports has not been tested.
• Machine = *.mtt file. Additive Print uses version 1.06 of the *.mtt file specification.
• Machine = *.slm file. Additive Print uses version 1.10 of the *.slm file specification.
• Machine = *.openjz file. Additive Print uses version 2.5 of the EOS API.
Notes:
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Deleting Parts, Supports, and Build Files
• The ability to import EOS build files is a Beta feature that must first be enabled before using it. Instruc-
tions for doing so, along with instructions for importing the files, are provided here.
• You must have an EOSPRINT 2 license, in the form of a dongle or from a license server, from EOS in order
to import an EOS build file into Additive Print.
• You cannot delete a part, support, or build file that is currently being used in a running simulation.
• You can archive support groups within completed and running simulations.
• You can restart a simulation even if you have archived the support group within it and the support
group will be intact.
• If you duplicate a simulation with an archived support group, the support group will not be included
in the duplicated simulation.
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Prepare and Import a Part
• If you delete a support that is included in a support group, it will be deleted from the support group.
If a support group has only one support left after a support deletion operation, the support group will
also be deleted.
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Set Up a Simulation - Assumed Strain
Once you have added a part into the Parts Library (or a build file into the Build File Library), you are
ready to begin setting up a simulation. You will use a simulation form to specify the criteria necessary
for a simulation, including the part and its material and stress behavior, support options, and the desired
output options of your simulation.
We will begin by performing an Assumed Strain Simulation. This is the simplest and fastest simulation
type. Most of the following steps described for an Assumed Strain Simulation are also required for the
other simulation types.
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Set Up a Simulation - Assumed Strain
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Select Geometry
Set Details
Details include Simulation Title, Tags, Description, and Number of Cores.
Number of Cores
To take advantage of High-Performance Computing, the Additive Desktop application allows you to
specify multiple processor cores. Depending on your Additive license, you may have up to 12 cores to
use. The default is 4.
Select Geometry
You select a part for simulation by adding it to your simulation form. Regardless of whether you add a
part or a build file, it must have been imported first to the Parts Library or Build File Library, respectively.
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Set Up a Simulation - Assumed Strain
Voxel Size
Upon adding a part to the simulation form, you will see a preview of that part as well as a summary
of the part’s overall dimensions in millimeters in x, y, and z coordinates, a minimum Voxel Size recom-
mendation, and an estimate for memory usage.
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Select Geometry
You will need to specify a Voxel Size and a Voxel Sample Rate to be used for your simulation. A voxel
is a hexahedral (cubic) element used in the finite element method. In the following figure of a voxel,
Voxel Size is the length of the yellow line.
When combined, voxels define the domain of the geometry. Minimum Voxel Size is the estimated
Voxel Size that can safely run without the simulation risking failure due to insufficient memory. This
is calculated automatically when the part is imported. Voxel size defaults to 0.5 mm.
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Set Up a Simulation - Assumed Strain
The following figure illustrates how subvoxels are used in defining the edges of geometries.
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Select Geometry
Generally, there should be at least four voxels through the thickness of the finest feature of interest.
This is accomplished by setting the Voxel Size to one-fourth the minimum feature dimension. It should
be noted however, that for a geometry with highly disproportionate overall dimensions compared
to its finest features, some accuracy may be sacrificed in the fine features to obtain a shorter run time
by applying the above rule to a thicker area of the part.
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Set Up a Simulation - Assumed Strain
As an example, if the starting Voxel Size takes 5 minutes of run time, and then the Voxel Size is reduced
by a factor of two, the run time could be expected to increase to approximately 5*(2) 4 = 80 minutes.
Currently, Voxel Size is limited to between 0.02 mm and 2 mm. However, due to memory requirements
of smaller Voxel Size simulations, this range of Voxel Size is not guaranteed to finish the simulation.
1. The support is voxelized at subvoxel resolution, marking the state of support subvoxels as support
material.
2. The part is voxelized at subvoxel resolution, marking the state of part subvoxels as part material,
and overwriting any support subvoxels that happen to be in the way (i.e., coincident).
3. For each voxel, the resulting part subvoxels and support subvoxels are tallied up.
5. The voxel's state is considered support material if the voxel contains only support subvoxels. Other-
wise, if there is at least one subvoxel marked as part, the voxel's state is considered part material.
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Select Geometry
So where there is overlap, there is no double-counting of density; the part material takes precedence
over the support material. This is relevant because, as discussed later, the support material's strength
is multiplied by a knockdown factor called Support Yield Strength Ratio (p. ?).
Hanging/Floating Voxels
We will discuss supports (p. 40) in more detail in the next section, but be aware of one scenario related
to geometry that you should try to avoid—having an overhanging "stalactite" point, line, or surface
that is unsupported. In the following figure, the middle section of the M-shaped geometry is not
supported. When the appropriate layer is reached and the laser travels the scan vectors for the bottom
of the M, an "island" of solid is formed surrounded by powder. This is undesirable for two reasons:
• When you attempt to print this part on an LPBF machine, the layers at the center of the M will likely
get wiped out by the recoater blade with each new pass because there is nothing holding the solid-
ified layer in place on the powder.
• In the numerical simulation, the unsupported area at the center of the M will result in what is known
as hanging and floating voxels, with no connection or support from voxels that touch the base. The
Mechanics Solver will accommodate for this by not applying strains to any floating voxels until they
are no longer floating, that is, until they are connected to other voxels that are connected to the
base. You will see a message in your logs indicating the number of hanging/floating elements.
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Set Up a Simulation - Assumed Strain
These support structures are commonly thin “walls” printed along with the part that are fixed to the
baseplate and connect to the part at areas of the geometry that overhang the main body of the part.
The supports are printed of the same metal material as the part and must be cut or machined off upon
completion of the build. Too many supports, or support walls that are too thick, will require excessive
post-build time to remove. Too few supports, or support walls that are too thin, may not be strong
enough to hold a part in place and may result in cracks, excessive distortion, drooping between walls,
or breaks.
In an Additive simulation, be aware that the conditions defining inherent strain are not applied to
supports, they are applied only to the solid part material. Thus, stress is not accumulating in the supports
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Define Support Options
as the layer-by-layer addition of material is simulated until solid part material is reached, at which time
the part material will cause some stress to develop in the supports.
The default SYSR value depends on which type of supports you use in your simulation, as described
next.
Support Type
The Additive application offers the following options for handling supports in a simulation:
• Using multiple user-imported support .stl files combined into a support group (p. 47)
Select which of these options you will use with the Simulate With Supports check box and the Support
Type drop-down selection, as shown here. Depending on the part you have selected, only the options
that are appropriate will be available to choose. So, for example, if you do not have a support group
associated with your selected part, the support group option is grayed out.
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Set Up a Simulation - Assumed Strain
imum residual stresses that supports must withstand are predicted in the simulation (in the Mechanics
Solver). The optimized support structures are then automatically generated (in the support generation
module) based upon an algorithm that varies the support density to carry these maximum residual
stresses. Two sets of optimized supports are generated:
• Optimized Volumeless Supports are of a uniform wall thickness (single-bead width), but wall spacing
is varied such that more walls are placed in regions of higher residual stress and fewer walls in regions
of lower residual stress.
• Optimized Solid Supports are uniformly spaced walls with varying thicknesses such that thicker
walls are placed in regions of higher residual stress and thinner walls in regions of lower residual
stress.
On your simulation form, you will need to specify certain parameters that guide the support generation
process.
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Define Support Options
Minimum Overhang Angle (°) - The overhang angle is measured from the powder bed surface (ho-
rizontal = 0 degrees) up to the surface of the part. Any point on the surface of the part having an
angle less than the Minimum Overhang Angle will be supported. The default Minimum Overhang
Angle is 45 degrees. Avoid using a value that is the same as the angle of the geometry of your part,
as it can cause asymmetric support structures due to finite rounding errors. For example, if your
geometry includes an overhanging feature of precisely 45 degrees, use 46 or 44 degrees for Minimum
Overhang Angle.
Supports will be created for overhang areas even in cases where the supports cannot reach the
baseplate because a portion of the part is in the way. In that case, supports will span part-surface to
part-surface. We call these part-to-part supports.
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Set Up a Simulation - Assumed Strain
Minimum Support Height (mm) - This is the height, in millimeters, that the part will be elevated off
the baseplate. If you set a value of 3 mm then the part will be elevated such that the lowest point
on the part is at least 3 mm above the baseplate. This value should be set to allow for an easy part
cutoff from the baseplate while also considering how many voxels must be created to add that addi-
tional height. (More voxel layers = more simulation time.) We recommend that this value be set as
low as is realistic for each simulation. The default value is 0. (See Simulating Without Supports (p. 48))
Support Factor of Safety - The Support Factor of Safety is a parameter that drives the strength of
the automatically generated optimized support structures. If you would like the supports to withstand
2x the expected load, then you would enter a 2 in this field and the predicted strength of the auto-
matically generated support structure would be double the predicted stress. The strength of the
support structure is driven by the number and thickness of support walls that are generated. The
default Support Factor of Safety is 1.
Support Yield Strength Ratio - The default SYSR (p. 41) value for the initial (geometry-based)
automatic supports is 0.4375. This default was determined by studies where the support strength for
default supports built on an EOS M270 machine were tested and compared to solid material built on
the same machine.
Maximum Wall Distance (μm) - Maximum Wall Distance is a parameter used for the optimized
volumeless supports. It is the allowed maximum distance between two neighboring support walls.
Regardless of the predicted stress level in the support structure, the walls in supported regions will
be spaced not more than this value. Too large of a wall distance might result in failures such as the
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Define Support Options
part breaking away from the support or the development of cracks in the support structure. When a
laser scans a relatively large area of powder where the support wall distance is too wide, cracking
might happen since powder has no strength to hold the solidified part in place. The excessive distortion
might cause blade and part collision. We recommend that Maximum Wall Distance should not exceed
2 mm when a volumeless (single bead) support wall is used.
Wall Distance (μm) - A parameter used for the optimized solid supports. It is the distance between
support walls.
The following figure shows the bevel gear example with all three sets of supports generated with
the automatic supports option using default settings. A close-up of the optimized volumeless supports
is also shown.
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Set Up a Simulation - Assumed Strain
The time to perform the support optimization function is related to the number of triangles (facets)
in your geometry. The more triangles, the longer support optimization will take. This may be especially
noticeable if you choose the distortion compensation output option that produces a distortion com-
pensated stl file with more triangles than the original stl file.
Support - Choose the desired support .stl file from the ones associated with your selected part. Use
support groups (p. 47) if you want to use more than one support .stl file in a simulation.
Support Yield Strength Ratio - The default SYSR (p. 41) value for .stl supports is 1. The voxelization
process will account for the thin nature of the support walls so an additional knockdown factor is
not needed.
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Define Support Options
Support Group - Choose the name of the support group from the ones associated with your selected
part.
Support Yield Strength Ratio - The default SYSR (p. 41) value for support groups is 1. At this release,
you can specify only one SYSR, even for support groups with mixed support .stl types (volumeless
and solid).
Volumeless STL Thickness (μm) - This parameter appears if one or more of the supports in the group
is a volumeless type. Enter the thickness of a single bead scan. The default value is 100 microns.
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Set Up a Simulation - Assumed Strain
Support Yield Strength Ratio - The default SYSR (p. 41) value for supports in build files is 1. At this
release, you can specify only one SYSR, even for build files with mixed support .stl types (volumeless
and solid).
Volumeless STL Thickness (μm) - This parameter appears if one or more of the supports in the build
file is a volumeless type. Enter the thickness of a single bead scan. The default value is 100 microns.
Minimum
Simulate Displacement
Support
with After Cutoff
Height What Happens? Part
Supports (output
(support
(check box) selection)
option)
No supports generated
N/A (0) Bottom nodes are rigid
(no displacements)
One layer of support voxels
added to simulate part after
cutoff
N/A (0)
No other supports added
anywhere
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Select Material
Minimum
Simulate Displacement
Support
with After Cutoff
Height What Happens? Part
Supports (output
(support
(check box) selection)
option)
Support Yield Strength Ratio
set to 1
Supports generated
below Minimum
Overhang Angle
0
Bottom nodes are rigid
(no displacements)
Supports generated below
Minimum Overhang Angle
Select Material
You may choose from standard ANSYS pre-defined materials or you may customize your own material.
Upon selecting a material from the drop-down selection, the properties of Elastic Modulus (in GPa),
Poisson Ratio, and Yield Strength (in MPa) for that material automatically populate the fields on the
form. These values are for materials at room temperature. To see the other properties associated with
a given material, or to customize a material, you will need to bring up the Materials Library. See Cus-
tomizing a Material (p. 53).
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Set Up a Simulation - Assumed Strain
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Select Material
The stress mode option is associated with a material’s ductility, a measure of a material's ability to
undergo significant plastic deformation before rupture. The following figure shows stress-strain curves
for a typical metal material. After yield, for a given strain, A, in the plastic deformation region, notice
that the stress at point B (fully linear elastic) is higher than the stress at point C (elastoplastic). Stress
values differ depending on your assumptions about material behavior.
In the Additive application, an assumption of linear elastic behavior will result in higher stress values
for a given strain beyond the yield point of the material. This over-prediction may not be realistic for
parts with larger strains. The simulation will run faster, however, which may be beneficial if you care
about on-plate distortions only (because you will heat-treat the final part to relieve residual stress,
for example). It is important to note that while stress values beyond the elastic range will be artificially
high, on-plate distortion values will generally be correct using the linear elastic option. Therefore, using
linear elastic stress mode can be useful for analyzing distortion trends while the part is still on the
baseplate.
An assumption of elastoplastic behavior (using the J2-plasticity model) applies best to ductile mater-
ials, such as most metals. Currently, small deformation plasticity has been used in these models where
addition of elastic and plastic strains amount to total strain, since metals do not exhibit the large
deformations we see in polymers, for example. Von Mises stresses are used to reduce the stress levels
when strain values exceed elastic strain. Strain hardening algorithms are included in the stress calcu-
lations (see Hardening Factor (p. 52)).
The simulation will run longer with the J2-plasticity option, but this option is required if you want
accurate distortion after-cutoff results, or accurate indications of stresses and strains.
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Set Up a Simulation - Assumed Strain
• Dynamic Load Stepping (default): The full load will be applied initially, and the solver will iterate
until equilibrium is achieved. If not achieved with the initial load, it will be halved and repeated. If
equilibrium is achieved, the next incremental step is applied at the current load fraction until applying
the full load, otherwise, it is halved again. A lower limit of 1/(200) load fraction is enforced, after which
the solution will terminate.
• Fixed Load Stepping: Fixed load stepping divides the load into a user-defined number of load steps.
– Number of Load Steps: The number of increments that a given load will be divided into for plasticity.
A larger number of load steps will require more loading calculations, but total time may or may
not increase due to potential improvements in convergence. (Valid range is between 1 and 200.
Defaults to 8.)
Hardening Factor
If you select the J2-plasticity option, a material-specific strain Hardening Factor is used in stress calcu-
lations to provide further information about the material’s behavior in the plastic deformation region.
The Hardening Factor is used to calculate the slope of the stress-strain curve (Ep) above the material’s
Yield stress:
Note: Previous to Release 19.2, a hardening factor of 0.1 was used for all materials. Following the 19.2
update, the default materials each have their own hardening factor. Custom materials created by the user
prior to this change will use 0.0198 as the hardening factor. A consequence of this change is that simulations
run from Release 19.2 forward may have slightly different output values than those run with previous re-
leases. The magnitude of the difference depends on a variety of factors including part geometry and ori-
entation, material, scan pattern, laser power and whether supports are used in the simulation.
You should use the default SSF of 1 for your first simulation in Additive and then work from there to
calibrate the best value of SSF. Because these are single data point values and there can be variations
even from batch to batch of material, we recommend that you calibrate for SSF for each specific
machine and material combination. Calibration procedures are available online here.
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Select Material
It is not necessary to perform this calibration if you are conducting a trend analysis, that is, if you will
be examining the effects of variable changes on stress or distortion relative to each other.
Customizing a Material
Click the Materials button in the left panel of the dashboard to bring up the Materials Library.
There you will see the list of ANSYS pre-defined materials. selecting any of these materials will bring
up a panel of detailed properties for that material. Click Customize to create a new material based
upon one of these pre-defined materials. Note that you cannot edit an ANSYS pre-defined material,
but you may edit your own customized materials.
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Set Up a Simulation - Assumed Strain
When you select a custom material to use in your simulation, the custom values of the material
properties will automatically populate the appropriate fields in the simulation form.
To remove your customized materials from the Materials Library, bring up the details page for that
material and click archive. Simulations using these materials will remain in your stored application
data.
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Select Outputs
Select Outputs
The powerful features of ANSYS Additive leading to the most useful insights for users are initiated by
simple output option check boxes. On a simulation form under Outputs, there are several options from
which to choose, depending on your simulation goals. These options may affect simulation run-time
but provide additional output files that will be available under Completed Simulations when the simu-
lation is complete. In some cases, additional inputs are required.
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Set Up a Simulation - Assumed Strain
Strain Components
If you selected J2-plasticity stress mode, check the "Include strain in output files" check box if you
want to see the strain components, both elastic and plastic, in the on-plate .vtk file. This option
will increase both your memory consumption and disk space for the results file.
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Select Outputs
On a simulation form under Outputs (either on-plate or after cutoff ), check the box for Distortion
compensated .stl file. Once selected, you have the option to specify Scale Factors. The Scale Factor
will change the magnitude of the distortion applied to the original .stl file. A Scale Factor of 1 (de-
fault) will create an .stl file with distortion compensated by the same magnitude as the simulated
results. A Scale Factor < 1 will compensate less than the simulation-predicted magnitude and a
value > 1 will compensate more than the simulation-predicted magnitude.
You may enter Multiple Scale Factors to determine which distortion compensation factor works
best for the part. Values must be between -5.0 and 5.0.
Once the simulation is complete, files labeled Compensated Geometry (and Compensated Geometry
(after cutoff )) can be found in the Output Files section under Completed Simulations. The Scale
Factor is used in the file name to distinguish results among multiple Scale Factors. Click the export
link to get the distortion compensated .stl file. A second output is also created named Geometry
with Distortion (and Geometry with Distortion (after cutoff )). This is a geometry representation in
.vtk format with displacement vectors with each vertex.
Since the Distortion Compensation feature is a simple linear assumption, it may not always be
correct. Parts can respond non-linearly. For example, if you use a Scale Factor of 1 (default) in a
simulation and then use the compensated file to rerun the simulation, you will see if the part is
predicted to distort to the correct shape. If not, you’ll know that the compensated .stl file was under-
compensated or overcompensated and you can adjust the Scale Factor up or down from there.
Generally, the Distortion Compensation feature tends to be an iterative process. In fact, our experience
shows good results using two iterations with Scale Factor = 0.5 for each simulation. Alternatively, a
good starting point for one iteration is a Scale Factor = 0.75.
To use Additive Print to simulate cutoff, choose Displacement After Cutoff. Use the Cutoff Mode
drop-down to select one of these cutoff scenarios:
• Part and Support Cutoff - the part and supports are cut from the baseplate and cut from each other
at the part-support boundaries. If the part touches the baseplate, one layer of support voxels is added
below the part to avoid cutting the part.
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Set Up a Simulation - Assumed Strain
• Support-only Cutoff - the support voxels are cut at the part-support boundaries, separating the part
from the support, but not the part from the baseplate. This option is available only if the Minimum
Support Height is less than the Voxel Size, otherwise it is disabled. This ensures that there are part
voxels touching the baseplate, thereby keeping the part attached to the baseplate even after support
removal.
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Select Outputs
The simulation results will include a voxelized representation of the part with predicted displacements
after the cutoff occurs.
In the case where you have chosen to simulate without supports (i.e., you have unchecked Simulate
with Supports in the Supports section of the simulation form) and you choose Displacement After
Cutoff, one layer of support voxels will be added to the base of the part to simulate part after cutoff
so as to avoid cutting the part. (See Simulating Without Supports (p. 48).)
• Model.cdb: A file containing mesh, material, and named selection information. (In Mechanical, named
selections allow you to group similar geometry or meshing entities.)
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Set Up a Simulation - Assumed Strain
• State.ist: A file containing Additive Print's on-plate end-state information (elastic strains, plastic strains,
and accumulated equivalent plastic strain). This will provide the initial stress state for subsequent
processing in Mechanical.
For details on how to use these files in ANSYS Mechanical, read our additional instructions here.
On a simulation form under Outputs, check the box for Detect potential blade crash due to distortion.
Once selected, you have the option to specify a Threshold Scaling Factor and Layer Thickness. (Note
that for Scan Pattern and Thermal Strain simulations, the Layer Thickness parameter appears in the
Machine section of the simulation form.)
Once the simulation is complete, a file labeled Potential blade crash locations can be found in the
Output Files section under Completed Simulations. Click the export link to get the .csv file. Indications
of blade crash are also available on the On-plate stress/displacements .vtk and .avz files and the Lay-
erwise .vtk files.
Each voxel will be assigned one of the following values for predicted blade crash:
• 0 (none predicted)
Layer Thickness is the thickness of the powder layer coating that is applied with every pass of the
recoater blade. The default value is 50 microns. We recommend that you use the actual thickness
unique to your machine.
This value is used to modify blade crash calculations so that you can allow for flexibility in the recoater
blade. Using the default value of 1 and a Layer Thickness value of 50 μm, any displacement in the
positive Z direction over 50 μm will be marked as a warning (potential blade crash) and any displace-
ment over 100 μm will be marked as a critical area (likely blade crash). In another example, if you
know there is not a lot of flexibility in the recoater blade, use a threshold value of 0.8. With a 50-micron
Layer Thickness, any displacement in the positive Z direction over 40 microns will be marked as a
warning and any area with displacement greater than 80 will be marked as critical.
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Select Outputs
Strain threshold values should be entered as a percent for the support and part material respectively.
(Engineering strain can be calculated as the change in length divided by the original length. For ex-
ample, a 3.0" titanium bar that has been stretched to 3.3" is said to have experienced a tensile strain
of 0.1, or 10 percent.) The default values of 10 and 20 percent strain are simply sample values, and
you should adjust these values as needed for different materials or other factors that may affect the
total elongation of your build material. When a calculated strain exceeds these threshold values, it
will be labeled as “Critical.”
The Strain Warning Factor allows you to establish a “Warning” range, to identify further areas where
strain is approaching the critical range.
Percentage strain in the supports above which strain will be considered critical. Defaults to 10%.
Percentage strain in the part above which strain will be considered critical. Defaults to 20%
This value is multiplied by each of the strain thresholds above to define limits where strain is labeled
as a warning. Defaults to 0.8.
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Set Up a Simulation - Assumed Strain
Using default values for all inputs, strains in the supports between 8 and 10 percent will be in the
warning range, while strains over 10 percent will be considered critical. Strains in the part between
16 and 20 percent will be in the warning range, while strains over 20 percent will be considered
critical.
The output of High Strain Areas can be viewed as part of the On-plate stress/displacement .vtk and
.avz files and the Layerwise .vtk files, as well as a High strain regions .csv file. When viewed through
the On-plate stress/displacement output, critical strain locations are given a value of 2 and warning
locations are given a value of 1. All other locations retain a value of 0 to show low risk. The High
strain regions .csv file consists of strain values for all points with strains at or above the warning
threshold. Information about each point includes the x, y, and z locations along with the strain value
and the deposit layer. The deposit layer represents the actual powder layer during a build. When using
the Assumed Strain analysis type, a layer thickness of 50 μm is used to identify the deposit layer of
each location.
To save your inputs to a file, use the Export button. (A Save action is required before you can Export.)
Exported files have an .aasp extension and may be imported using the Import button under Draft
Simulations. Exported files do not include the part.
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Run a Simulation - Assumed Strain
Start a simulation by clicking on the Start button at the bottom of your simulation form. You will imme-
diately see status activity in a convenient summary format.
• A simulation with J2-plasticity (stress mode) will take slightly longer than a simulation assuming linear
elastic stress behavior. Stress results will be more accurate. See Linear Elastic versus J2-Plasticity Stress
Mode (p. 50).
• A Scan Pattern simulation will take slightly longer than an Assumed Strain simulation. See Scan Pattern
Strain - Anisotropic (p. 15).
• A Thermal Strain simulation will take much longer than any other type of simulation, but it provides
the highest level of accuracy in results. See Thermal Strain - Anisotropic (p. 15).
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Run a Simulation - Assumed Strain
• Too small of a voxel size can increase simulation time significantly. See How Does Voxel Size Affect Run
Time? (p. 37)
• A part oriented with the longest dimension in the Z direction will take longer during simulation than
parts oriented with their longest dimension in the plane of the baseplate. While the domain volume
doesn’t change with part orientation, the number of voxel layers changes. See Guidelines for Part Ori-
entation and Resolution (p. 21).
• Run time will get slower per voxel layer as the simulation proceeds through the voxel layers. There are
more calculations being performed for each new layer as the simulation progresses.
• Simulation time does not equal build time but it is related. If the time to build your part takes a week,
it is reasonable to expect the simulation to take a few days.
Error Message:
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Can I Run Multiple Simulations at Once?
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Review Results of a Simulation - Assumed Strain
Look for the Success status indication to know your simulation has completed. In the Overview and
Logs sections, you will see beginning and ending time stamps and other useful information. Simulation
results are found in the Output Files section.
Output Files
Results from your simulation are viewable in ANSYS Viewer, or are exportable files (.avz files are ANSYS
Viewer files), or both, as described in the following tables.
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Review Results of a Simulation - Assumed Strain
On-plate .vtk Voxelized part with predicted displacements and stresses (and
Stress/Displacement* and optionally, strains) at the end of the build (i.e., end state) while
.avz the part is still attached to the baseplate.
• End-state stress in Pa: von Mises, xx, yy, zz, xy, yz, zx components
• End-state elastic and plastic strain: xx, yy, zz, xy, yz, zx components
(if Include strain in output files output option is chosen)
• Max stress during build in Pa: von Mises, and xx, yy, zz in compression
& tension for each
• Blade crash severity (if Detect potential blade crash output option is
chosen)
• High strain severity (if High Strain Areas output option is chosen)
After Cutoff .vtk Voxelized part with predicted displacementsafter cutoff has
Displacement and occurred (either part and support cutoff or support-only cutoff,
.avz depending on the Cutoff Mode option).
Layerwise .vtk files .vtk A series of .vtk files that show voxelized representation of part
(zipped) layer-by-layer during the build. You will have as many .vtk files as voxel
layers. Use these files to animate the build process. View locations
throughout the part of potential blade crashes and high strain areas
that may indicate cracks.
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Output Files
• Blade crash severity (if Detect potential blade crash output option is
chosen)
• High strain severity (if High Strain Areas output option is chosen)
Geometry with .vtk Contains a representation of the original, undistorted part with
Distortion predicted displacements at the end of the build while part is still
attached to the baseplate. The geometry does not include the offset
for supports between the baseplate and the part.
Geometry with .vtk Contains a representation of the original, undistorted part with
Distortion (after Cutoff ) predicted displacements after cutoff has occurred (either part and
support cutoff or support-only cutoff, depending on the Cutoff Mode
option).
Positioned Part .stl Input geometry (non-compensated) positioned into its start location
and orientation, that is, offset to account for supports between the
baseplate and the part.
Compensated Geometry .stl Contains the distortion-compensated 3D surface representation
(tessellated triangles) of the part while the part is still attached to the
baseplate. The compensated geometry is placed flush with the
baseplate surface and does not include the offset for supports between
the baseplate and the part.
You may want to use this file as the part geometry for final
production builds.
Compensated Geometry .stl Contains the distortion-compensated 3D surface representation
(after Cutoff ) (tessellated triangles) of the part after cutoff has occurred (either part
and support cutoff or support-only cutoff, depending on the Cutoff
Mode option).
You may want to use this file as the part geometry for final
production builds.
• End-state stress in Pa: von Mises, xx, yy, zz, xy, yz, zx components
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Review Results of a Simulation - Assumed Strain
View this file to see areas of the part that need supports based on
Minimum Overhang Angle specified on the simulation form.
Compares to typical third-party software that generates supports
on part areas that meet the overhang minimum.
Optimized Volumeless .stl Contains optimal volumeless support layout based on predicted stresses
Support and distortions that can be used to minimize risk of support failure.
Optimized Solid Support .stl Contains optimal solid support layout based on predicted stresses and
distortions that can be used to minimize risk of support failure.
High Strain Regions .csv List of high strain warning areas during the build.
• Global x, y, z coordinates
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Using ANSYS Viewer to Review Results
State .ist Predicted strains at the end of the build (i.e., end state) while the
part is still attached to the baseplate. This will provide the initial
stress state for subsequent processing in Mechanical.
• End-state elastic and plastic strain tensors (xx, yy, zz, xy, yz, zx
components)
Knockdowns .ist An output file of the voxel densities of the part and supports. (These
are the same densities as contained in the Solver Voxel Input file.)
They are imported into Mechanical as knockdown factors.
• Density: A value between 0 (empty) and 1 (full) for each voxel indicating
the material density ratio of the subvoxels after voxelization.
Displacements .csv Predicted displacements at the end of the build (i.e., end state)
while the part is still attached to the baseplate.
To bring up ANSYS Viewer, click “View” next to any of the outputs with that link in the Output Files
section under Completed Simulations.
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Review Results of a Simulation - Assumed Strain
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Using ANSYS Viewer to Review Results
You can click on different result items in the View Manager to see them displayed. Use your mouse
buttons to move the part around in the image preview; left button for spin, middle for zoom, and right
button for pan.
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Performing a Scan Pattern Simulation
A Scan Pattern Simulation uses anisotropic strain calculations to improve upon the assumed strain
method. That is, a Scan Pattern Simulation takes into account the fact that more strain develops in the
scan direction than perpendicular to it, as shown in the following figure. Anisotropic strain is rapidly
calculated for each powder layer based on the major orientation of the fill scan vectors or the specific
scan vector files if loaded through a build file. Then these individual layer strain values are collected
and averaged to the voxel size. The predicted strain is then used for a rapid mechanics analysis.
In addition to the standard inputs as described in Set Up a Simulation - Assumed Strain (p. 31), there
are two unique sets of input required for a Scan Pattern Simulation. These are the anisotropic strain
coefficients of your material, and the type and process parameters of your 3D printing machine.
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Performing a Scan Pattern Simulation
Anisotropic strain coefficients are used to represent anisotropic strain behavior on coordinate systems
aligned with the local longitudinal, transverse, and depth scan directions. Positive values result in
compressive base strain (contraction), whereas negative values result in tensile strain (expansion). Default
values are shown in the following table.
Anisotropic strain coefficient (||) = 1.5 Longitudinal: The predicted strain in the direction that
the laser is scanning for the major fill rasters will be
multiplied by 1.5
Anisotropic strain coefficient (⊥) = 0.5 Transverse: The predicted strain orthogonal to the
direction that the laser is scanning for the major fill
rasters and in the plane of the surface of the build
plate will be multiplied by 0.5
Anisotropic strain coefficient (z) = 1 Depth: The predicted strain in the Z direction will be
multiplied by 1
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Machine Parameters for a Scan Pattern Simulation
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Performing a Thermal Strain Simulation
Thermal Strain Simulations provide the highest degree of accuracy by predicting how thermal cycling
affects strain accumulation at each location within a part. It uses inherent strain but also implements
a thermal ratcheting algorithm to locally modify the inherent strain value.
In addition to the standard inputs as described in Set Up a Simulation - Assumed Strain (p. 31), you
will need to:
• Consider using a Mesh Resolution Factor, a scaling factor to control speed versus accuracy of the simu-
lation
MRF is inversely proportional to run time and fidelity. If the MRF is too low, the simulation will take a
long time to complete. If the MRF is too high, you will see a warning message, such as "The Mesh Res-
olution Factor (MRF) used (4) is too coarse to accurately resolve the maximum melt pool width (0.188
mm). For more accurate results, please reduce the MRF such that (MRF * 0.057 mm) < max melt pool
width." This means the element size is too large to fully capture the heat transfer phenomena in the
melt pool. We recommend you use the default value of MRF = 5, in which case you should see compar-
able run times to the pre-2019 R1 release, but the results are being generated at better than twice the
resolution in X and Y.
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Performing a Thermal Strain Simulation
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Machine Parameters for a Thermal Strain Simulation
Important:
The values of Baseplate Temperature, Laser Beam Diameter, Laser Power, and Scan Speed
in the simulation form override the build file, so take care to set these parameters the way
you want them.
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Performing a Thermal Strain Simulation
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Additive Science
Performing a Single Bead Parametric Simulation (p. 85)
A Single Bead Parametric Simulation is a tool used to obtain information about the melt pool character-
istics of your selected material. It is set up to follow the industry practice of testing single beads on PBF
machines, in which the laser runs in one single scan line across powder. The goal is to determine the
geometry of the melt pool. Geometry refers to melt pool width, length, and depth, as shown in the
following figure. Using simulation is a good way for you to see how process parameters affect melt
pool characteristics without using a lot of expensive material and machine time.
Throughout this and the following chapter, we will use an example to demonstrate just one of the
many ways you can use Additive Science to gain insights into your PBF process. This is hypothetical
example where we have made assumptions about our process goals and chosen material that may not
be valid in other cases. We will run a Single Bead Parametric simulation using a generic material.
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Performing a Single Bead Parametric Simulation
Machine Configuration
Enter values for the process parameters (p. 17) in this section of the simulation form. Inputs include
Baseplate Temperature (°C), Layer Thickness (µm), and Laser Beam Diameter (µm) as constant values
and Laser Power (W) and Scan Speed (mm/sec) as parametric variables. You can enter variable values
through either the incremental step tool, or manually, or both. (Note that each time you use the incre-
mental step tool it will overwrite the values you have already entered.)
In this example, we entered Laser Powers starting at 50 and ending at 400 in increments of 50. After
clicking on the check-mark, the values of 50, 100, 150, 200, 250, 300, 350, and 400 are entered.
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Machine Configuration
Continuing with this example, we entered Scan Speeds between 700 and 1300 in increments of 100.
This will result in 56 individual permutations in the simulation. That is, single bead scans will be simulated
at a Laser Power of 50 and a Scan Speed of 700, then another one for Laser Power = 50 and Scan Speed
= 800, another one at Laser Power = 50 and a Scan Speed = 900, and so on until every combination is
performed. This is a full factorial experiment, with each laser power matched with each scan speed.
There is a limit of 300 permutations in one simulation.
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Performing a Single Bead Parametric Simulation
Geometry Configuration
The Geometry Configuration section of the simulation form is where you enter the Bead Length (in
mm). Valid input values are real numbers between 1 and 10. In our studies, we have seen that the melt
pool becomes stable (i.e., reaches steady-state) well within 2 mm for all our validated ANSYS-defined
materials. It is seldom that you will need a Bead Length longer than 3 mm (default).
Reviewing Results
In the ANSYS Additive application, we track the instantaneous melt pool along the bead length and
then average the value of each dimension over the entire bead length. Output files are provided for
both the individual permutations showing the full progression along the bead length and a summary
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Reviewing Results
file of the average and median melt pool length, reference depth, and reference width for each permuta-
tion. From the following figure, we see that the reference depth is the entire melt pool depth minus
the Layer Thickness, or the melt pool depth starting from the bottom of the first layer. Similarly, the
reference width is the width at the bottom of the first layer (the start of the substrate).
It is the median result of any particular dimension you should use when interpreting your data, rather
than the average result. The average will be skewed by the beginning of the bead when the melt pool
is not yet stable. Let's examine the results from our example.
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Performing a Single Bead Parametric Simulation
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Reviewing Results
Summary Results
The Single Bead Summary file summarizes the melt pool characteristics for all 56 permutations. The
parametric variables are listed in the left two columns; scan speed and laser power. We'll begin by
sorting the data by median melt pool reference depth to see how scan speed and laser power influence
melt pool depth. As a quick check of our data, for the last row with the deepest melt pool (0.182 mm
median reference depth), we would expect to see the highest power and slowest scan speed combination.
Indeed, our data shows the highest power (400 W) and slowest scan speed (700 mm/s) permutation
from our simulation.
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Performing a Single Bead Parametric Simulation
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Reviewing Results
In our example simulation, we added columns in the summary table to calculate depth-to-width ratio
and length-to-width ratio using the simulation data. We made the following hypothetical assumptions
regarding the criteria for "good-candidate" power/speed combinations:
• We want a melt pool depth that reaches at least halfway through the third layer. A penetration depth
of about three layers through the thickness reduces porosity by remelting previous layers. Since our
layer thickness is 40 microns (0.04 mm), that means we want a melt pool depth of at least 0.1 mm,
which is a median melt pool reference depth of at least 0.06. The data that fall outside of our acceptable
criteria for melt pool reference depth are shown in the yellow shaded area of the median melt pool
reference depth column. These melt pools are not deep enough.
• We want a depth-to-width ratio below 0.95. The data that fall outside of our acceptable criteria are
shown in the blue shaded area of the depth-to-width ratio column. These melt pools are too deep.
• We want a length-to-width ratio below 4.0. The data that fall outside of our acceptable criteria are shown
in the orange shaded area of the length-to-width ratio column. These melt pools might be too long.
Data points that meet all the good-candidate criteria above (power/speed combinations that are not
in the yellow, blue, or orange shaded regions) are shown in the green shaded rows in the summary
table.
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Performing a Single Bead Parametric Simulation
The following is a chart of all the data from the summary table shown in a power/speed process map.
We can make the following observations:
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Reviewing Results
• Data points in yellow are the power/speed combinations that fall outside our acceptable criteria for melt
pool reference depth, indicating melt pools that are not deep enough. This makes sense given that the
yellow points are in a region of the map with high scan speeds and low laser power (i.e., low energy density),
which could contribute to lack-of-fusion porosity between the layers.
• Data points in blue are the power/speed combinations that fall outside our acceptable criteria for depth-
to-width ratio, indicating melt pools that are too deep. This makes sense given that the blue points are in
a region of the map with low scan speeds and high laser power (i.e., high energy density), which could lead
to keyhole formation.
• Data points in orange are the power/speed combinations that fall outside our acceptable criteria for length-
to-width ratio, indicating melt pools that may be too long. This is an area of the map with the highest speeds
and the highest powers, an area which has the potential for the generation of spatter and for a beading effect
known as balling.
Based on median width and length data from the table, melt pool sizes ( ) are shown for a few
sample points in the chart to show relative sizes of the melt pools. Note that these are not true scale.
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Performing a Porosity Parametric Simulation
Following Single Bead Parametric simulations, typically you will want to expand your exploration to
include Porosity Parametric simulations. Porosity simulations are used to obtain information about the
level of porosity in additively manufactured material. They are set up to follow the industry practice of
building full 3D cubes (or cuboids) on PBF machines in which many layers are printed using your chosen
material and scan pattern.
Let us now revisit the power/speed process map. In our single bead example, we made some assumptions
about melt pool criteria that would yield good-candidate power/speed combinations based on hypo-
thetical experimental data. Without the benefit of experimental data, however, it becomes a wide open
exploration with many variables. ANSYS Additive solves for only lack-of-fusion porosity. Accurate simu-
lations of the other two porosity mechanisms (keyholing and balling) would require full fluids analyses
and would consider the effects of other physics within the melt pool. Still, our software can guide you
toward a more informed approach when choosing process parameters, and provide essential information
about lack-of-fusion porosity, in particular.
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Performing a Porosity Parametric Simulation
As in Single Bead Parametric simulations, up to 300 permutations are possible for Porosity Parametric
simulations. However, each permutation takes a much longer time to complete because, now, many
layers are being simulated in the cuboid geometry, not just a single bead. The general approach is to
select the best candidate process parameters as determined from the Single Bead Parametric simulation
and introduce a new variable, such as Hatch Spacing. In our example, we identified 8 target power/speed
combinations to study further. If we introduce 5 hatch spacing values, we will have 40 porosity permuta-
tions.
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Machine Configuration
Machine Configuration
Because many build layers are simulated in porosity simulations, you need to account for your particular
PBF machine and your chosen scan pattern. See Understanding Machine Parameters (p. 17) for descrip-
tions of these input parameters.
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Performing a Porosity Parametric Simulation
For our example, note that we can't enter all our speeds, powers, and hatch spacings on one simulation
form because that would produce a full factorial simulation of 4 powers, 5 speeds, and 5 hatch spacings
for 100 total permutations. Instead, we ran 4 separate simulations, as shown here.
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Reviewing Results
Geometry Configuration
Enter the Width, Length, and Height of the cuboid (in mm). Valid input values are real numbers between
1 and 10. In our studies, we have seen that the porosity pattern will reach steady state within a 3 x 3
x 3 mm cube (default) for all our validated ANSYS-defined materials. It is seldom that you will need a
cube larger than the default.
Reviewing Results
Lack-of-fusion porosity is identified in Porosity Parametric simulation results as values of solid ratio below
1. In other words, an ideal solid would have a solid ratio of 1. Anything that is not solid is a void, or
powder. The goal when additively manufacturing parts is to choose process parameters that optimize
our process. One guideline is to choose the fastest scan speed and the widest hatch spacing possible
while staying within our target processing region so as to avoid porosity. Depending upon what our
acceptable level of porosity may be, we can reduce our choices to a few viable candidates.
The following table shows porosity results for 25 of the 40 permutations. We have identified the best
candidates based on a target criteria of less than 0.5% porosity (shaded in green). The fastest build rate
of these candidates is the combination of 300 W power, 1100 mm/s scan speed, and 0.13 mm hatch
spacing.
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Performing a Porosity Parametric Simulation
Solver Tuning
The single bead and porosity simulations have some input parameters that are not available to the
user. These variables include thermal material properties, mesh size, absorptivity, and laser penetration
depth. Thermal material properties are temperature dependent and have been set to match material
produced through the additive manufacturing process. Laser penetration depth and absorptivity have
been tuned to fit data from single bead experiments and vary according to the power and velocity
used in the simulation. Mesh size is set to 15 µm for single bead simulations and 25 um for porosity
simulations. These values have been identified as values that give good results both in terms of accuracy
and simulation speed.
In general, the validity of a porosity simulation diverges from empirical data when porosity is greater
than 30%. This can be caused by high variance in empirical data at high levels of porosity or from sim-
ulation resolution of meltpools in low energy density scenarios. We do not recommend you simulate
with settings that will generate porosity greater than 30%.
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Performing a Thermal History Simulation
In this simulation type, given a material, a part, and all the process parameters – meltpool dimensions
and thermal history are output for a particular cross-section of your part, simulating results from a
coaxial average sensor. This feature is a Beta feature at Release 2020 R1. Beta documentation, if available,
may be found here.
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Performing a Microstructure Simulation
For simulations with Aluminum 357, AlSi10Mg, or Inconel 718, given the melt pool characteristics,
thermal inputs and all the process parameters – grain orientation of the material are output for three
2D planes (XY, XZ, and YZ) simulating typical results of EBSD laboratory tests. Also, grain size distribution
and orientation angle distribution are output in graph form using a circle equivalence method and
orientation map for all three planes, respectively. Microstructure simulations are parametric so you can
run several permutations to determine which process parameters will affect grain size the most. A
Specific Random Seed input parameter may be used to instigate the same nucleation pattern for a
given set of process conditions so that comparison simulations are possible. Microstructure Simulation
capability is a Beta feature at Release 2020 R1. Beta documentation, if available, may be found here.
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Glossary
.aasp File
From "ANSYS Additive simulation package," the .aasp file format is a proprietary file
format that contains simulation inputs that can be imported into ANSYS Additive. When
imported, a new simulation form is populated under Draft Simulations. Note that this
file does not contain the part or simulation results.
Activity Status
The section of results where graphical indicators show the status of each function within
the simulation workflow.
After cutoff displacement .vtk and .avz file formats
An output file that contains the voxelized representation of the part with predicted
displacements after cutoff has occurred (either part and support cutoff or support-only
cutoff, depending on the Cutoff Mode option). Data on file include magnitude and x,
y, and z components of displacement. Included in Output Files when a user has selected
to output the displacement after cutoff.
Anisotropic
When the properties of a material vary with different orientations, the material is said
to be anisotropic. The mechanical and thermal properties of these materials differ in
different directions. (Alternately, when the properties of a material are the same in all
directions, the material is said to be isotropic.)
Anisotropic Strain Coefficients
Coefficients used to represent anisotropic strain behavior on coordinate systems aligned
with the local longitudinal, transverse, and Z (depth) scan directions. Positive values
result in compressive base strain (contraction), whereas negative values result in tensile
strain (expansion).
Anisotropic Strain Coefficient (||) Defaults to 1.5.
Multiplier on the predicted strain in the direction that the laser is scanning for the major fill
rasters.
Anisotropic Strain Coefficient ( ) Defaults to 0.5.
Multiplier on the predicted strain orthogonal to the direction that the laser is scanning
for the major fill rasters and in the plane of the surface of the build plate.
Anisotropic Strain Coefficient (Z) Defaults to 1.
Multiplier on the predicted strain in the Z direction.
Materials in the Materials Library that are available for use and may not be edited.
ANSYS pre-defined materials are designed to capture the effect of a material’s chemical
composition, powder-to-liquid and liquid-to-solid state transitions, and high cooling
rates.
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Glossary
ANSYS Viewer
ANSYS Viewer is an interactive 3D image viewer that is either embedded into your
ANSYS application or is available as an exportable file (on the ANSYS Customer Portal
here) to run in your web browser. Designed specifically for sharing and collaboration,
ANSYS Viewer enables you to visualize 3D models created in ANSYS CAE software even
if you do not have ANSYS software installed. ANSYS Viewer files have a .avz extension.
ANSYS Viewer is embedded in ANSYS Additive for seamless 3D visualization.
Assumed Strain Simulation
A simulation method that assumes a constant, isotropic strain (inherent strain) occurs
at every location within a part as it is being built. This is the fastest simulation method.
.avz File
The surface of the 3D printing machine upon which the part is built. Also called the
build plate.
Baseplate Temperature ( °C ) Must be a real number between 0 and 200. Defaults to
80 °C.
The controlled temperature of the baseplate.
Bead Length Must be a real number between 1 and 10. Defaults to 3
mm.
The length of the laser scan in a Single Bead Simulation.
Blade Crash
A scenario in which the recoater blade of the printing machine hits into the part already
printed, most likely due to distortion of the part as a result of residual stress.
Build File
Build files are unique to each 3D printing machine and are required to be .zip files
containing the part .stl file as well as files specifying machine scan vectors.
Build File Library
The repository for Build Files that you have imported into the program. Build Files are
formatted .zip files written for specific 3D printing machines.
Build File Type
The machine type, such as Additive Industries, Renishaw, or SLM, corresponding to your
build file. When importing a build file, selecting the build file type assures that the
appropriate translator will be used.
Compensated Geometry .stl file format
An output file containing the distortion-compensated 3D surface representation
(tessellated triangles) of the part while the part is still attached to the baseplate. The
compensated geometry is placed flush with the baseplate surface and does not include
the offset for supports between the baseplate and the part.
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Compensated Geometry (after .stl file format
cutoff)
An output file containing the distortion-compensated 3D surface representation
(tessellated triangles) of the part after cutoff has occurred (either part and support
cutoff or support-only cutoff, depending on the Cutoff Mode option).
Completed Simulation
Simulations that have either completed or that have been canceled or failed due to
error. These simulations are no longer running. Select a simulation in the Completed
Simulations area of the dashboard to see simulation results along with input parameters
and log files for that simulation.
.csv File
From "comma separated values," this is a file that allows data to be saved in a
table-structured format. Traditionally, a .csv file is in the form of a text file containing
information separated by commas, hence the name.
Customized Materials
Materials that have been edited from the original ANSYS pre-defined materials are
labeled as customized materials.
Cutoff Mode
The main area, or “home,” of the Additive user interface that shows an overview of
Draft Simulations, Running Simulations, and Completed Simulations.
Deposit Layer
The layer of metal powder spread over the baseplate or melted material. Simulations
begin at a deposit layer of 0 and layers are numbered sequentially thereafter as each
successive layer is added.
Detect Potential blade crash due to distortion
An output option that activates the blade crash detection feature of Additive. If this
box is checked, there will be a check to determine if the +Z displacement at every point
in each new layer exceeds a threshold value. Locations of potential blade crash and
associated displacement values are provided in a .csv output file, as well as in the
On-Plate Residual Stress/Distortion and Layerwise .vtk files.
Distortion
An output option that activates the distortion compensation feature of Additive, which
predicts the location and magnitude of displacement and then reverse distorts the
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Glossary
original .stl file. When you build your part using the compensated geometry, the result
will be closer to the original design.
Distortion Compensation
One of the functions within the simulation workflow responsible for reverse distorting
the original .stl file to compensate for the effects of predicted distortion. Shown with
a status indicator in the Activity Status area of Running and Completed Simulations.
Domain
The entirety of the voxels in the simulation as defined by the bounding dimensions of
the part plus the support voxels (if any). Some voxels are part material, some are support
material and some are powder.
Dynamic Load Stepping
An option with J2-plasticity stress mode dictating how the total load will be applied to
each layer. The full load will be applied initially, and the solver will iterate until
equilibrium is achieved. If not achieved with the initial load, it will be halved and
repeated. If equilibrium is achieved, the next incremental step is applied at the current
load fraction until applying the full load, otherwise, it is halved again. A lower limit of
1/(200) load fraction is enforced, after which the solution will terminate.
Elastic Modulus Must be between 45 and 407 GPa. The default is material
dependent.
A material property that is a measure of the material's stiffness. Elastic Modulus, or
Young’s Modulus (E), describes tensile elasticity, or the tendency of an object to deform
along an axis when opposing forces are applied along that axis; it is defined as the ratio
of tensile stress to tensile strain.
Estimated Memory Usage
For Additive Desktop, an estimate of the memory required to run the simulation based
on the dimensions of the part and Voxel Size. This estimate is provided in the Geometry
Selection section of the simulation form as soon as you add a part. The estimate is
calculated without considering support generation.
Experimental
A label applied to any new feature that has not been fully validated, but that we feel
is stable and useful for users.
Fill Rasters
An option with J2-plasticity stress mode dictating how the total load will be applied to
each layer. Fixed load stepping divides the load into a user-defined number of load
steps, Number of Load Steps.
Generic
The Generic machine selection in the Machine Configuration section of the simulation
form applies default input parameters that we have determined to be appropriate
through initial testing. The default machine parameters most closely approximate an
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EOS machine, but may be similar to most commonly used metal laser powder bed
fusion machines.
Geometry Height, Z Must be a positive real number between 1 and 10.
Defaults to 1 mm.
The height of the cuboid, in millimeters, for the thermal solution.
Geometry Length, Y Must be a positive real number between 1 and 10.
Defaults to 1 mm.
The length of the cuboid, in millimeters, for the thermal solution.
Geometry Selection
This section of the simulation form where you select a part (or a build file) for simulation.
Parts (or build files) must first have been imported to the Parts (or Build File) Library.
Geometry Width, X Must be a positive real number between 1 and 10.
Defaults to 1 mm.
The width of the cuboid, in millimeters, for the thermal solution.
Geometry with Distortion .vtk file format
An output file containing the 3D surface representation (tessellated triangles) of the
original, undistorted part with predicted displacements at the end of the build while
part is still attached to the baseplate. The geometry does not include the offset for
supports between the baseplate and the part.
Geometry with Distortion (after .vtk file format
cutoff)
An output file containing the 3D surface representation (tessellated triangles) of the
original, undistorted part with predicted displacements after cutoff has occurred (either
part and support cutoff or support-only cutoff, depending on the Cutoff Mode option).
The geometry does not include the offset for supports between the baseplate and the
part.
Hardening Factor Must be between 0 and 0.5. The default is material
dependent.
Also known as strain hardening coefficient, a material-specific factor used to calculate
the slope of a material’s stress-strain curve (Ep) above the material’s Yield stress.
Hatch Spacing Must be between 10 and 1000 µm. Defaults to 100 µm.
The distance between adjacent scan vectors when rastering back and forth with the
laser. Hatch spacing should allow for a slight overlap of scan vector tracks such that
some of the material re-melts to ensure full coverage of solid material.
High Strain Areas
An output option that allows you to identify regions of the part that may be prone to
forming cracks during or after the build process by highlighting critical strain values.
High Strain Regions .csv file format
An output file containing a list of high strain warning areas during the build with their
associated strain values.
Inherent Strain
The residual, irrecoverable strain caused by a heat source melting or partially melting
a material in a very localized spot such that the thermal contraction of cooling solidified
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Isotropic materials have identical properties in all directions. For an isotropic medium,
the stiffness tensor has no preferred direction: an applied force will give the same
displacements (relative to the direction of the force) regardless of the direction in which
the force is applied.
J2-Plasticity
One of the options for stress mode in ANSYS Additive strain-based simulations.
J2-plasticity is a part of plasticity theory that applies best to ductile materials, such as
some metals. Ductility is a measure of a material's ability to undergo significant plastic
deformation before rupture. J2-plasticity uses Von Mises stresses to reduce the stress
levels when strain values exceed elastic strain with strain hardening algorithms included.
Simulations run longer with the J-2 plasticity option but stress and strain results will
be more accurate.
Laser Beam Diameter Must be between 80 and 120 µm. Defaults to 100 µm.
The width of the laser on the powder or substrate surface defined using the D4σ beam
diameter definition. Usually this value is provided by the machine manufacturer.
Sometimes called laser spot diameter.
Laser Powder Bed Fusion (L-PBF)
In Additive Manufacturing, a method of Powder Bed Fusion (PBF) that involves spreading
a layer of metal powder and then using a laser to melt or fuse metal powder material
together to build a part. This is the method being simulated in ANSYS Additive.
Laser Power Must be between 10 and 500 Watts. Defaults to 195
Watts.
The power setting for the laser in the machine.
Layer Rotation Angle Must be between 0 and 180°. Defaults to 67°.
The angle at which the major scan vector orientation changes from layer to layer. This
is commonly 67 degrees.
Layer Thickness Must be between 10 and 100 µm. Defaults to 50 µm.
The thickness of the powder layer coating that is applied with every pass of the recoater
blade. We recommend that you use the actual thickness used for your machine and
build material.
Layerwise .vtk Files .zip file containing many .vtk files
A series of .vtk files that show voxel representation of the part layer-by-layer during
the build. You will have one .vtk file for every voxel layer. The .vtk files are compressed
into a .zip file.
Linear Elastic
An assumption that a material will undergo strain linearly proportional to the magnitude
of applied stress and that the material will return to its original shape when the loads
are removed. (A simple straight line on a stress strain curve.) One of the options for
stress mode in ANSYS Additive strain-based simulations. Using this option can result in
a higher maximum stress value for a given strain beyond the yield point for the material.
This overprediction may not be realistic for parts with larger distortions. Stresses and
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strains may be unrealistically high. Distortion values will generally be accurate, however,
so the linear elastic option may be useful for analyzing distortion trends while the part
is still on the baseplate. The simulation runs faster with the linear elastic option and is
a good choice if you are just beginning with Additive and you want to run practice
simulations with default options.
Load Stepping Type
An input option if you choose J2-plasticity stress mode specifying how the total load
for each layer will be applied. Options include Dynamic Load Stepping (default) and
Fixed Load Stepping.
Logs
The section of results where the time-stamped log entries are collected. Reading log
messages is useful for following the progress of a simulation.
Machine Configuration
The section of the simulation form where you identify machine and process parameters.
You will see this section for Scan Pattern and Thermal Strain simulations only. Assumed
Strain simulations do not require inputs related to the 3D print machine.
Material Configuration
The section of the simulation form where you identify the material. When you select a
material, properties associated with that material are automatically populated and any
related background information is tied to the simulation.
Material Library
The repository for saved materials, including ANSYS pre-defined materials and user
customized materials.
Maximum Wall Distance Must be between 0 and 10000µm. Defaults to 1600 µm.
Must be greater or equal to Wall Thickness.
A parameter used for the optimized volumeless supports. It is the allowed maximum
distance between two neighboring support walls. Regardless of the predicted stress
level in the support structure, the walls in supported regions will be spaced not more
than this value. Too large of a wall distance might result in failures such as the part
breaking away from the support, the development of cracks at the bottom of the part,
or drooping between support hatches. When a laser scans a relatively large area of
powder where the support wall distance is too wide, cracking might happen since
powder has no strength to hold the solidified part in place. The excessive distortion
might cause blade and part collision. We recommended that Maximum Wall Distance
should not exceed 2 mm when a single bead support wall is used.
Maximum Wall Thickness Must be between 0 and 10000 µm. Defaults to 1000 µm
(1 mm). Must be greater or equal to Minimum Wall
Thickness.
A parameter used for the optimized solid supports. Support wall thicknesses will not
exceed Maximum Wall Thickness even in areas of high stress.
Mechanics Solver
One of the functions within the simulation workflow responsible for calculating
displacements and stresses. Shown with a status indicator in the Activity Status area of
Running and Completed Simulations.
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Overhang Angle
Angle measured from the horizontal baseplate (0 degrees) to the surface of the part.
Any surface measuring less than the Minimum Overhang Angle will be supported.
Overview
A section of the simulation results where you can quickly see a summary status of the
simulation.
Part
The geometry for the simulation as defined by an .stl file that must be imported to the
Parts Library. This is the most common method for defining geometry.
Part Strain Threshold Must be between 1 and 100%. Defaults to 20%.
An input parameter required when you choose the High Strain Areas output option.
Defined as the percentage strain in the part above which strain will be considered
critical. (Critical regions are shown in the On-plate stress/displacements, Layerwise .vtk,
and High Strain Regions output files.)
Parts Library
The repository for all parts (as .stl files) that have been imported into the system.
Individual .stl files must be smaller than 100MB.
Poisson's Ratio
Residual stress is the internal stress distribution locked into a material after all external
loading forces have been removed. Stresses are a result of the material obtaining
equilibrium after it has undergone elastoplastic deformation. In additive manufacturing
processes, a part undergoes repeated expansion and contraction from the heating and
cooling of the build process. This repeated heating and cooling can lead to residual
stress—a result that shows up as cracks, warpage, and other forms of deformation in
an object.
Result ID
A unique identifier for each simulation. When reporting a problem or looking for
clarification on a specific simulation, this is the number that needs to be included with
a support request. You will see the Result ID in the Overview section of Running and
Completed Simulations.
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Glossary
Reverse Distort
A simulation that is either actively running or has been queued to begin as soon as
resources are available. Select a simulation in the Running Simulations list on the
dashboard to see input parameters, activity status, and log files for that simulation.
Scale Factor Must be between 0.1 and 5. Defaults to 1.
An input parameter required when you choose the Distortion Compensated .stl File
output option. The Scale Factor will change the magnitude of the displacement applied
to the original .stl file. A Scale Factor of 1 (default) will create an .stl file with
displacement compensated by the same magnitude as the simulated results. A Scale
Factor < 1 will compensate less than the simulation-predicted magnitude and a value
> 1 will compensate more than the simulation-predicted magnitude.
Scan Pattern Simulation
This simulation type uses the same average strain magnitude as in the Assumed Strain
Simulation but it subdivides that strain into anisotropic components based on the local
orientation of scan vectors within the part. This strain mode requires the creation of
scan vectors using user-provided scan settings or by reading scan vectors from a
supported machine's build file. This extra step results in a small, increased amount of
simulation time compared to Assumed Strain simulation. For parts where the scan
pattern is randomized, scan pattern and assumed strain should give a similar answer.
For parts where the scan patterns are aligned, scan pattern strain will result in a more
accurate prediction.
Scan Speed Must be between 10 and 10000 mm/sec. Defaults to 1000
mm/sec.
The speed at which the laser spot moves across the powder bed along a scan vector
to melt material, excluding jump speeds and ramp up and down speeds.
Scan Vector
Direction and velocity of one laser scan across the part. Multiple scan vectors make up
a layer’s scan pattern.
Sensor Dimension Must be between 0.1 and 1 mm. Defaults to 0.5 mm.
The dimension (width and length, in millimeters) of the 2D planes for the microstructure
solution.The sensor point is the intersection of all three planes and is always on the top
surface of the cuboid. Sensor Dimension must not exceed Geometry Width plus the 0.5 mm
buffer (0.25 mm on each side) and must not exceed Geometry Length plus the 0.5 mm
buffer (0.25 mm on each side). Sensor Dimension must not exceed Geometry Height.
Simulate with Supports
A check box (on/off ) option in the Supports section of the simulation form that controls
whether supports are automatically generated in the simulation.
Simulation Form
All simulations are initiated from a simulation form. It holds the inputs and selections
for your simulation. Saved simulation forms are shown under Draft Simulations in the
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dashboard. Once you start a simulation, it is removed from Draft Simulations (i.e., it is
no longer a “draft”) but all your input options are shown for Running Simulations and
Completed Simulations.
Slicer
One of the functions within the simulation workflow responsible for “slicing” the domain
into scan vectors according to the scan pattern input parameters. Shown with a status
indicator in the Activity Status area of Running and Completed Simulations.
Slicing Stripe Width Must be between 1 and 100 mm. Defaults to 10 mm.
When using the stripe pattern for scan strategy, the geometry can be broken up into
sections, which are called stripes. The stripes are scanned sequentially to break up what
would otherwise be very long continuous scan vectors. Slicing Stripe Width is commonly
set to 10 mm wide. Memory requirements for the thermal solution will expand
significantly as you increase the Slicing Stripe Width much beyond the default.
Solver Voxel Input .vtk file format
An output file with a voxelized representation of the part and supports showing voxel
densities. This file is output early in the simulation, after voxelization but before solution
begins. If you specified automatic supports, the supports in this file are simply a
generalized density, not specifically one of the optimized supports. If you imported
support .stl files, this file shows your imported supports. You can see how well the part
and support geometries are represented by the voxel mesh and to confirm that your
supports are aligned correctly to the part.
Start (button)
Starts a simulation from the simulation form. All your input options are stored when
you run a simulation so that you may see your options at any time when you click on
a simulation in the Running Simulations and Completed Simulation areas of the
dashboard.
Starting Layer Angle Must be between 0 and 180°. Defaults to 57°.
The orientation of fill rasters on the first layer of the part. This is currently measured
from the X axis, such that 0 degrees results in scan lines parallel to the X axis. The
starting layer angle is commonly set to 57 degrees.
Status
The status of a part indicates the readiness of the part for running a simulation. When
you first import a part it will show as "processing", but there are some basic
pre-processing steps that are completed at this time, so the part is not available for a
simulation until "Available" appears in the status. (As a common practice, you can import
a part and then go to a simulation template and by the time the template is ready to
run the part will usually be available. When importing particularly large parts then there
is a chance that you may need to wait for import to complete.)
.stl File
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Strain Mode
Strain mode refers to the simulation type (Assumed Strain, Scan Pattern, or Thermal
Strain).
Strain Scaling Factor Must be between -10 and 10. Defaults to 1.
The Strain Scaling Factor (SSF) is a calibration factor used to account for differences in
machines that you may use to improve the accuracy of your simulations. This value is
a direct multiplier to the predicted strain values. Using a value of 1 will result in strain
magnitudes as calculated by the solver. Some material and geometry combinations
result in bulging/expansion rather than shrinkage and so a negative SSF is possible.
Values between -1 and 1 will reduce displacement and stress while values outside of
that range will amplify them. Using a value of 0 will result in no strain and the final
displacement will match the input geometry. The default Strain Scaling Factor is 1.
Strain Warning Factor Must be between 0.1 and 1. Defaults to 0.8.
An input parameter required when you choose the High Strain Areas output option.
This factor is multiplied by both the Support Strain Threshold and the Part Strain
Threshold to define limits where strain is labeled as a warning (i.e., approaching critical
range).
Stress Mode
An input option that allows you to choose between linear elastic or elastoplastic (using
the J2-plasticity model) material behavior in calculations of stress.
Support (or Support Structure)
Support structures act as fixtures to anchor a part to a baseplate during part fabrication.
In an ideal scenario, the support density should be as low as possible so that less
material is consumed and supports can be easily removed. However, if the support
density is too low, supports can fail due to the intense strain resulting from thermal
stress accumulation in the part. The Additive application uses predicted residual stress
accumulation as criteria for support generation.
Support Factor of Safety Must be between 0.1 and 10. Defaults to 1.
An input parameter that drives the strength of the automatically generated optimized
support structures. If you would like the supports to withstand 2x the expected load,
then you would enter a 2 in this field and the predicted strength of the auto-generated
support structure would be double the predicted stress. The strength of the support
structure is driven by the number and thickness of support walls that are generated.
Support Group (or Support STL Group)
A designated group of support .stl files associated with a part that allows you to use
multiple supports in one simulation. You can mix support .stl types, that is, volumeless
supports and solid supports, in a support group.
Support Optimization
One of the functions within the simulation workflow responsible for automatically
generating supports. Shown with a status indicator in the Activity Status area of Running
and Completed Simulations.
Support Strain Threshold Must be between 1 and 100%. Defaults to 10%.
An input parameter required when you choose the High Strain Areas output option.
Defined as the percentage strain in the supports above which strain will be considered
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critical. (Critical regions are shown in the Supports stress/displacement and High Strain
Regions output files.)
Support Yield Strength Ratio Must be between 0.01 and 1. Defaults to 0.4375.
The Support Yield Strength Ratio (SYSR) is a factor that is used in the simulation
assumptions to assign a strength to the support material as compared to the solid
material. It is used as a knockdown factor to modify the strength of the support material.
It affects both yield strength and elastic modulus of the support material. For example,
a value of 1.0 results in a support strength equal to the solid material while 0.5 is half
the strength of the solid material. The default SYSR value depends on which type of
supports you use in your simulation.
Supports Stress/Displacement
A result file, output in both .vtk and .avz file formats, containing the voxelized
representation of the support structure with predicted displacements and stresses at
the end of the build (i.e., end state) while the part is still attached to the baseplate.
Tags
Tags are used throughout the Additive application to provide optional input for reference
and searching criteria.
Thermal Simulation
This is the method for calculating the thermal interaction of the laser and the material
at every point in a part throughout the entire build. This method takes much longer
than either of the other simulation methods, but is a much higher fidelity result.
Thermal Solver
One of the functions within the simulation workflow responsible for calculating inherent
strain fields dependent upon scan patterns (Scan Pattern simulation), or scan patterns
and thermal history (Thermal Strain simulation). Shown with a status indicator in the
Activity Status area of Running and Completed Simulations.
Threshold Scaling Factor Must be between 0.5 and 1.5. Defaults to 1.
An input parameter required when you choose the Detect potential blade crash due
to distortion output option. This factor is used to modify blade crash calculations so
that you can allow for flexibility in the recoater blade. (Potential blade crash locations
are shown in the On-plate stress/displacements, Layerwise .vtk, and Potential blade
crash locations output files.)
Title
The number of triangular tessellation elements that define the outer surfaces of your
imported .stl geometry, making up the 3D representation of the part. You will see the
triangle count for a part on the detailed description of each part in the Parts Library.
Uniform Volumeless Support .stl file format
An output file of the geometry-based auto-generated support structure. The uniform
thin-walled supports use a uniform wall thickness and spacing and are created based
solely on geometry using the Minimum Overhang Angle parameter. These supports are
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Glossary
not to be used as stress optimized supports and are not recommended to use in building
parts (use the optimized supports instead).
Version
Unique identifier of the release of the ANSYS Additive application. You can find the
version number under Help > About.
Volume (mm³)
The volume of the part is calculated based upon a rough estimation of the part.
Voxel
A hexahedral (six-sided) element used in the finite element method in the Mechanics
Solver. A regular hexahedron is a cube with all its faces square. Skewed, or elongated,
sides are acceptable up to a certain amount in the solver. When combined, voxels define
the domain of the geometry.
Voxelization
One of the functions within the simulation workflow responsible for creating the
voxelized geometry, that is, dividing the domain into voxels for simulation in the
Mechanics Solver. Shown with a status indicator in the Activity Status area of Running
and Completed Simulations.
Voxel Sample Rate Must be an integer between 1 and 10. Defaults to 5.
The number of divisions on each side of a voxel used in determining Voxel Density.
The input value is cubed, for example, a sample rate of 2 means 2 by 2 by 2 = 8 samples
(i.e., a voxel is divided into 8 sampling regions called subvoxels). A sample rate of 5 =
5 x 5 x 5 = 125 samples (125 subvoxels). Sample rate affects the accuracy of voxel
density. A higher number yields a more accurate Voxel Density approximation resulting
in preserved edges of a geometry.
Voxel Size Must be between 0.02 and 10 mm. Defaults to 0.5 mm.
The length of any side of the voxel (hexahedral element).
.vtk File
From "Visualization Toolkit," the .vtk file format is an open source specification for
storing 3D computer graphics, images, and visualization data. A right-handed Cartesian
coordinate system is used.
.vtk to .avz Conversion
One of the functions within the simulation workflow responsible for converting
generic-format results files to a format appropriate for ANSYS Viewer. Shown with a
status indicator in the Activity Status area of Running and Completed Simulations.
Wall Distance Must be greater or equal to Maximum Wall Thickness
µm. Defaults to 1600 µm.
A parameter used for the optimized solid supports. It is the distance between support
walls.
Wall Thickness Must be between 20 and 500 µm.
A parameter used for the optimized volumeless supports. It is the wall thickness of the
generated support walls.
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Yield Strength Must be between 10 and 4000 MPa. The default is
material dependent.
The material property defined as the stress, in MPa, at which a material begins to deform
plastically. Prior to the yield point the material will deform elastically and will return to
its original shape when the applied stress is removed. Once the yield point is passed,
some fraction of the deformation will be permanent and non-reversible.
Young's Modulus
Also known as the elastic modulus, Young's modulus is a mechanical property of linear,
elastic solid materials and is a measure of their stiffness. It defines the relationship
between stress (force per unit area) and strain (proportional deformation) in a material.
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