4.7 Article

Improving strength and impact resistance of 3D printed components with helicoidal printing direction

Journal

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.ijimpeng.2022.104320

Keywords

3D printing; Helicoidal layup; Printing direction; Out-of-plane strength; Impact performance

Funding

  1. Agency for Science, Technology and Research (Singapore) [R-265-000-673-305]

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Inspired by the fibre layup in the exoskeleton of mantis-shrimp, this study demonstrates that controlling the printing direction can significantly improve the out-of-plane strength and impact toughness of 3D printed plates. The helicoidal layup of the printed plates surpasses conventional plates in terms of strength and impact energy dissipation. The study also reveals that the damage mechanisms of 3D printed plates differ under static loading and dynamic impact, and the helicoidal layup excels in both conditions.
Inspired by the fibre layup in the exoskeleton of mantis-shrimp, we show that the out-of-plane strength and impact toughness of 3D printed plates can be significantly improved by simply controlling the tool path (printing direction) of each layer to replicate a helicoidal layup. Without any increase in weight or fabrication time, or effects on the final shape, 3D printed helicoidal plates are shown to outperform conventional printed plates by up to 360% and 128% in terms of out-of-plane strength and impact energy dissipation. Moreover, the 3D printed plates with helicoidal layup can sustain 20% higher out-of-plane load than compression moulded plates and possess comparable impact resistance. The damage mechanisms of 3D printed plates are different under static loading and dynamic impact. Helicoidal layup excels in both conditions; the well-distributed voids in helicoidal layups are effective at preventing large crack formations during static loading; while spiralling cracks in the helicoidal layup prevent catastrophic crack propagation during impact. Fibre reinforced laminates have been reported to possess superior mechanical properties when arranged in a helicoidal fashion. This study is performed using plain unreinforced PLA, showing the benefits of such bioinspired substructure are not exclusive to composites.

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