Litcius/Paper detail

Effect of Post-Printing Cooling Conditions on the Properties of ULTEM Printed Parts

Tatjana Glaskova‐Kuzmina, Didzis Dejus, Jānis Jātnieks, Andrey Aniskevich, Jevgenijs Sevcenko, Anatolijs Šarakovskis, Aleksejs Zolotarjovs

2023Polymers18 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

9085 printed parts processed by fused deposition modeling (FDM). Three different cooling conditions were applied after printing Ultem samples: from 180 °C to room temperature (RT) for 4 h in the printer (P), rapid removal from the printer and cooling from 200 °C to RT for 4 h in the oven (O), and cooling at RT (R). Tensile tests and dynamic mechanical thermal analysis (DMTA) were carried out on samples printed in three orthogonal planes to investigate the effect of the post-printing cooling conditions on their mechanical and thermophysical properties. Optical microscopy was employed to relate the corresponding macrostructure to the mechanical performance of the material. The results obtained showed almost no difference between samples cooled either in the printer or oven and a notable difference for samples cooled at room temperature. Moreover, the lowest mechanical performance and sensitivity to the thermal cooling conditions were defined for the Z printing direction due to anisotropic nature of FDM and debonding among layers.

Topics & Concepts

Materials scienceComposite materialFused deposition modelingUltimate tensile strength3D printing3d printerDynamic mechanical analysisScreen printingThermalThermal analysis3d printedAnisotropyMechanical engineeringBiomedical engineeringPolymerOpticsMedicinePhysicsEngineeringMeteorologyAdditive Manufacturing and 3D Printing TechnologiesAdditive Manufacturing Materials and ProcessesManufacturing Process and Optimization