Big Area Additive Manufacturing Application in Wind Turbine Molds
Abstract
Tooling is a primary target for current additive manufacturing (AM), or 3D printing,
technology because of its rapid prototyping capabilities. Molds of many sizes and shapes have
been produced for a variety of industries. However, large tooling remained out of reach until the
development of large-scale composite AM manufacturing processes like the Big Area Additive
Manufacturing (BAAM) system. The Department of Energy’s Oak Ridge National Laboratory
(ORNL) worked with TPI Composites to use the BAAM system to fabricate a wind turbine blade
mold. The fabricated wind turbine blade mold was produced in 16 additively manufactured
sections, was 13 meters long, had heating channels integrated into the design, and was mounted
into a steel frame post fabrication. This research effort serves as a case study to examine the
technological impacts of AM on wind turbine blade tooling and evaluate the efficacy of this
approach in utility scale wind turbine manufacturing.