Journal
JOURNAL OF RHEOLOGY
Volume 61, Issue 2, Pages 379-397Publisher
SOC RHEOLOGY
DOI: 10.1122/1.4976839
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Funding
- Ives Foundation
- National Institute for Standards and Technology (NIST), Georgetown University
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Three-dimensional (3D) printing is rapidly becoming an effective means of prototyping and creating custom consumer goods. The most common method for printing a polymer melt is fused filament fabrication (FFF) and involves extrusion of a thermoplastic material through a heated nozzle; the material is then built up layer-by-layer to fabricate a 3D object. Under typical printing conditions, the melt experiences high strain rates within the FFF nozzle, which are able to significantly stretch and orient the polymer molecules. In this paper, we model the deformation of an amorphous polymer melt during the extrusion process, where the fluid must make a 90 degrees turn. The melt is described by a modified version of the Rolie-Poly model, which allows for flow-induced changes in the entanglement density. The complex polymer configurations in the cross section of a printed layer are quantified and visualized. The deposition process involving the corner flow geometry dominates the deformation and significantly disentangles the melt. (C) 2017 The Society of Rheology.
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