Litcius/Paper detail

Size Effects on the Mechanical Properties of 3D Printed Plaster and PLA Parts

Chao Wu, Chen Chen, Christopher Cheeseman

2021Journal of Materials in Civil Engineering16 citationsDOI

Abstract

It is common to perform small-scale prototyping before large-scale application of three-dimensional (3D) printing technology and in this case size effects can have an important effect. There has been limited study to date on the size effects associated with 3D printing technology. Plaster and polylactic acid (PLA) were selected as typical inorganic and organic 3D printing materials. Binder jetting was used to print cube plaster specimens for compressive testing and fused deposition molding was used to print PLA beams for flexural testing. Five sizes were used for both plaster and PLA specimens. The experiments found that the compression strength of the plaster specimens decreased by 46% and the bending strength of the PLA specimens decreased by 15% and 39% relative to two printing schemes with the size increasing. Microstructural analysis using a digital image correlation technique were used to understand the specimen size effects observed. Existing size effect theories were used to model experimental results and recommendations are given regarding modeling efficiency. The paper provides experimental evidence on how the size of specimens produced by 3D printing technology influences properties and microstructure.

Topics & Concepts

Fused deposition modelingPolylactic acidMaterials science3D printingFlexural strengthComposite materialMicrostructure3d printedBendingMolding (decorative)Compressive strengthDeposition (geology)Rapid prototypingPolymerBiomedical engineeringGeologyEngineeringSedimentPaleontologyAdditive Manufacturing and 3D Printing TechnologiesInnovations in Concrete and Construction MaterialsManufacturing Process and Optimization