Large-format additive manufacturing (LFAM) is used to print large-scale polymer structures. Understanding the thermal and mechanical properties of polymers suitable for large-scale extrusion is needed for design and production capabilities. An in-house-built LFAM printer was used to print polyethylene terephthalate glycol with 30% carbon fiber (PETG CF30%) samples for thermomechanical characterization.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFParts made through additive manufacturing (AM) often exhibit mechanical anisotropy due to the time-based deposition of material and processing parameters. In polymer material extrusion (MEX), printed parts have weak points at layer interfaces, perpendicular to the direction of deposition. Poly(lactic acid) with chopped carbon fiber was printed on a large-format pellet printer at various extrusion rates with the same tool pathing to measure the fiber alignment with deposition via two methods and relate it to the ultimate tensile strength (UTS).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHigh-entropy alloys (HEAs) are new alloy systems that leverage solid solution strengthening to develop high-strength structural materials. However, HEAs are typically cast alloys, which may suffer from large as-cast grains and entrapped porosity, allowing for opportunities to further refine the microstructure in a non-melting near-net shape solid-state additive manufacturing process, additive friction stir deposition (AFSD). The present research compares the microstructure and mechanical behavior of the as-deposited AFSD AlCoCrFeNi to the cast heat-treated properties to assess its viability for structural applications for the first time.
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