4.8 Article

Highly Expandable Foam for Lithographic 3D Printing

Journal

ACS APPLIED MATERIALS & INTERFACES
Volume 12, Issue 16, Pages 19033-19043

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsami.0c02683

Keywords

foams; 3D printing; additive manufacturing; digital light processing; high expansion

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [OISE 1844463]
  2. ENLACE program at UCSD

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In modern manufacturing, it is a widely accepted limitation that the parts patterned by an additive or subtractive manufacturing process (i.e., a lathe, mill, or 3D printer) must be smaller than the machine itself that produced them. Once such parts are manufactured, they can be postprocessed, fastened together, welded, or adhesively bonded to form larger structures. We have developed a foaming prepolymer resin for lithographic additive manufacturing, which can be expanded after printing to produce parts up to 40x larger than their original volume. This allows for the fabrication of structures significantly larger than the build volume of the 3D printer that produced them. Complex geometries comprised of porous foams have implications in technologically demanding fields such as architecture, aerospace, energy, and biomedicine. This manuscript presents a comprehensive screening process for resin formulations, detailed analysis of printing parameters, and observed mechanical properties of the 3D-printed foams.

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