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Journal ArticleDOI

CONVEX (CONtinuously Varied EXtrusion): A new scale of design for additive manufacturing

TLDR
In this paper, the authors introduce a new microscale design approach, CONVEX, based on the idea of CONtinuously Varying EXtrusion widths of deposited filaments in material extrusion additive manufacturing (MEAM).
Abstract
This study introduces a new microscale design approach, CONVEX, based on the idea of CONtinuously Varying EXtrusion widths of deposited filaments in material extrusion additive manufacturing (MEAM). The CONVEX design approach breaks free from the traditional 3D printing workflow of filling a CAD-model volume with stacked extruded filaments of constant width and height. Instead, the geometry of each filament is explicitly designed over its entire length. The concept may disrupt a wide range of applications in both the short and long term. In the least ambitious short-term implementation of CONVEX, its principles can be integrated into 3D printing slicing software to allow a geometric form to be fitted by streamlined filaments, with constantly varying widths as required to match the overall geometry (referred to as “streamlined slicing”). The use of continuous streamlined filaments, as opposed to frequently changing the number of filaments, improved the quality of manufactured parts by eradicating voids and defects, which are known to cause critical stress concentrations in specimens for tensile testing. At the other end of the scale, in the most disruptive implementation of the CONVEX design approach, entire new material structures and product types will be enabled, with feature size-scales perhaps an order of magnitude lower than that permitted by present design rules. This will enable new innovative metamaterials and is particularly appropriate for high-value applications such as advanced filtering, tissue engineering, drug delivery, microfluidics or electronics, where the geometries of individual extruded filaments (or deliberate inter-filament pores) form the functional design geometry. To prove the technical feasibility of CONVEX, this study includes rigorous experimental work to characterise how instantaneous changes to MEAM process parameters (e.g. speed, acceleration, extrusion rate and retraction) enable highly controllable and dynamic variation of the width of extruded filaments (from 75 % to 250 % of nozzle diameter). The concept is proven for multiple materials, layer heights, extrusion temperatures, nozzle sizes, and for both Bowden and direct-drive printer types. The Bowden printer was found to be an order of magnitude less responsive to changes in extrusion rate than the direct-drive printer. Case studies demonstrate the CONVEX design approach, which has already enabled break-through micro-mechanical research for MEAM. Industrial implications are discussed along with the potential for translation to other manufacturing processes.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

FullControl GCode Designer: Open-source software for unconstrained design in additive manufacturing

TL;DR: The FullControl design concept offers new opportunities for creative and high-precision use of additive manufacturing systems, and offers a general framework for unconstrained design and is not limited to a particular type of structure or hardware.
Journal ArticleDOI

Mechanical performance of 3D printed polylactide during degradation

TL;DR: In this article, the degradation of 3D-printed parts for the first time at 37°C and accelerated temperatures was investigated. And the authors showed that during the early stage of degradation, crystallinity was the dominating factor, whilst at later stages, mechanical properties were mainly defined by the molecular weight and autocatalytic degradation.
Journal ArticleDOI

ZigZagZ: Improving mechanical performance in extrusion additive manufacturing by nonplanar toolpaths

TL;DR: In this article, the effect of non-planar toolpaths on the performance of fused filament fabrication (FFF) additive manufacturing has been investigated, where a range of nonplanar geometries were developed including a ZigZagZ sequence in which filaments were deposited as the nozzle moved in the X or Y direction while simultaneously zigzagging up-and-down i.e. in the Z direction.
Journal ArticleDOI

Accurate linear and nonlinear model-based feedforward deposition control for material extrusion additive manufacturing

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present two FF control strategies for mitigating over- and under-extrusion defects in material extrusion (ME) 3D printing. But, the authors focus on the extrusion control in ME AM and do not consider the extruder motion control.
Journal ArticleDOI

Continuously Varied Infill Pattern (ConVIP): Improvement of mechanical properties and printing speed of Fused Filament Fabrication (FFF) 3D printing

TL;DR: In this article , a layer stacking scheme that increases mechanical properties and reduces printing time through a continuously varied Infill Pattern (ConVIP) was proposed. But, the results and relationship of process parameter were explained and analyzed through confocal microscopy.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Polymers for 3D Printing and Customized Additive Manufacturing

TL;DR: Polymers are by far the most utilized class of materials for AM and their design, additives, and processing parameters as they relate to enhancing build speed and improving accuracy, functionality, surface finish, stability, mechanical properties, and porosity are addressed.
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3D printing with polymers: Challenges among expanding options and opportunities.

TL;DR: The goal of this review is to connect the various additive manufacturing techniques with the monomeric and polymeric materials they use while highlighting emerging material-based developments.
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Parametric appraisal of mechanical property of fused deposition modelling processed parts

TL;DR: In this paper, five important process parameters such as layer thickness, orientation, raster angle, Raster width and air gap are considered and their influence on three responses such as tensile, flexural and impact strength of test specimen is studied.
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Mechanical characterization of 3D-printed polymers

TL;DR: In this article, the authors provide a brief discussion about additive manufacturing and also the most employed additive manufacturing technologies for polymers, specifically, properties under different loading types such as tensile, bending, compressive, fatigue, impact and others.
Journal ArticleDOI

Failure Analysis and Mechanical Characterization of 3D Printed ABS With Respect to Layer Thickness and Orientation

TL;DR: In this paper, a comprehensive effort was undertaken to represent the strength of a 3D printed object as a function of layer thickness by investigating the correlation between the mechanical properties of parts manufactured out of acrylonitrile butadiene styrene using fused deposition modeling and layer thickness and orientation.
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