Litcius/Paper detail

Characterization of 3D Printing on Jute Fabrics

Edgar Adrián Franco Urquiza, Yael Ramírez Escamilla, Perla Itzel Alcántara Llanas

2021Polymers40 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

This work evaluates the feasibility to manufacture polylactic acid (PLA) composites using jute fiber fabrics. For characterization, PLA-fused filament was successfully deposed onto jute fabrics to print dog-bone tensile specimens (Type I specimen from ASTM D638). The jute fabrics were chemically modified, treated with flame retardant additives, and sprayed with aerosol adhesive to improve the mechanical properties of PLA/Jute fabric composites. The elastic modulus and the strength of PLA were higher than PLA composites, and the plastic deformation of the PLA composites was slightly lower than PLA. Tomography scans revealed the fabrics were well oriented and some adherence between jute fabrics and PLA. Viscoelastic properties of PLA composites resulted in the reduction in storage modulus and the reduction in intensity in the damping factor attributed to segmental motions with no variations in the glass transition temperature. Flame retardant and spray adhesive on jute fabrics promoted better response to time of burning than PLA and PLA with modified fibers. The results presented in this work lead to the need for a more detailed investigation of the effect of plant fiber fabrics as reinforcement of 3D printed objects for industrial applications.

Topics & Concepts

Materials sciencePolylactic acidComposite materialFire retardantAdhesiveDynamic mechanical analysisUltimate tensile strengthFiberPolymerLayer (electronics)Additive Manufacturing and 3D Printing Technologiesbiodegradable polymer synthesis and propertiesBone Tissue Engineering Materials