Continuous fiber-reinforced additive manufacturing (cFRAM) composites improve the mechanical properties of polymer components. Given the recent interest in their mechanical performance and failure mechanisms, this work aims to describe the principal failure mechanisms and compare the prediction capabilities for the mechanical properties, stiffness constants, and strength of cFRAM using two distinct predictive models. This work presents experimental tensile tests of continuous carbon fiber AM composites varying their reinforced fraction, printing direction, and fiber angle.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn additive manufacturing (AM), thermoplastic components made by fused deposition modeling (FDM) offer low strength and stiffness, as required for fully functional and load-bearing parts. Composite materials are a practical solution to improve mechanical properties [1,2]. A new technology to reinforce thermoplastics with continuous fibers has been developed recently by Markforged [3].
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