Md Abu Jafor, Neshat Sayah, Douglas E. Smith, G. Stano, Trevor J. Fleck
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The results show that the application of a heating gun (assembled near the nozzle) provides a statistically significant increase in mean fracture toughness energy from 12.3 kJ/m2 to 33.4 kJ/m2. The underlying mechanism driving this finding was further investigated by quantifying porosity at the multi-material interface using an X-ray computed tomography (CT) system, in addition to quantifying thermal history. The results show that using both bead ironing and the hot air gun during the printing process leads to a reduction of 24% in the average void volume fraction. The findings from the DCB test and X-ray CT analysis agree well with the polymer healing theory, in which an increased thermal history led to an increased fracture toughness at the multi-material interface. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
材料挤压(MEX)增材制造技术成功地制造出了由在同一制造周期内加工的不同材料组成的无装配结构。具有不同机械特性的材料可用于制造生物启发结构(即刚性材料与软性材料连接),这对生物医学和软机器人等许多领域都很有吸引力。本文介绍了改善碳纤维增强尼龙(CFPA)和热塑性聚氨酯(TPU)之间界面粘附性的工艺参数和三维打印策略。为了实现我们的目标,我们采用了双悬臂梁(DCB)试验来评估模态 I 断裂韧性。结果表明,应用加热枪(装配在喷嘴附近)可使平均断裂韧性能量从 12.3 kJ/m2 显著增加到 33.4 kJ/m2。通过使用 X 射线计算机断层扫描(CT)系统对多材料界面的孔隙率进行量化,并对热历史进行量化,进一步研究了这一发现的内在机理。结果表明,在印刷过程中使用珠熨和热风枪可使平均空隙体积分数减少 24%。DCB 测试和 X 射线 CT 分析的结果与聚合物愈合理论十分吻合,即热历史的增加会导致多材料界面断裂韧性的增加。此外,本研究还考虑了每个印刷层的热历史,从而将测得的脱粘能量与使用跃迁理论得出的结果联系起来。
Systematic Evaluation of Adhesion and Fracture Toughness in Multi-Material Fused Deposition Material Extrusion
Material extrusion (MEX) additive manufacturing has successfully fabricated assembly-free structures composed of different materials processed in the same manufacturing cycle. Materials with different mechanical properties can be employed for the fabrication of bio-inspired structures (i.e., stiff materials connected to soft materials), which are appealing for many fields, such as bio-medical and soft robotics. In the present paper, process parameters and 3D printing strategies are presented to improve the interfacial adhesion between carbon fiber-reinforced nylon (CFPA) and thermoplastic polyurethane (TPU), which are extruded in the same manufacturing cycle using a multi-material MEX setup. To achieve our goal, a double cantilever beam (DCB) test was used to evaluate the mode I fracture toughness. The results show that the application of a heating gun (assembled near the nozzle) provides a statistically significant increase in mean fracture toughness energy from 12.3 kJ/m2 to 33.4 kJ/m2. The underlying mechanism driving this finding was further investigated by quantifying porosity at the multi-material interface using an X-ray computed tomography (CT) system, in addition to quantifying thermal history. The results show that using both bead ironing and the hot air gun during the printing process leads to a reduction of 24% in the average void volume fraction. The findings from the DCB test and X-ray CT analysis agree well with the polymer healing theory, in which an increased thermal history led to an increased fracture toughness at the multi-material interface. Moreover, this study considers the thermal history of each printed layer to correlate the measured debonding energy with results obtained using the reptation theory.