4.7 Article

Melt Electrowriting of Thermoplastic Elastomers

Journal

MACROMOLECULAR RAPID COMMUNICATIONS
Volume 39, Issue 10, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/marc.201800055

Keywords

3D printing; electrowriting; melt electrospinning writing; melt processing; poly(urea-siloxane)

Funding

  1. European Research Council (ERC) [617989]
  2. German Research Foundation (DFG) [TRR225]
  3. State Major Instrumentation Programme [INST 105022/58-1 FUGG]
  4. Keylab Small Scale Polymer Processing, University Bayreuth
  5. Elite Network of Bavaria (ENB), Macromolecular Science

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Melt electrowriting (MEW), an additive manufacturing process, is established using polycaprolactone as the benchmark material. In this study, a thermoplastic elastomer, namely, poly(urea-siloxane), is synthesized and characterized to identify how different classes of polymers are compatible with MEW. This polyaddition polymer has reversible hydrogen bonding from the melt upon heating/cooling and highly resolved structures are achieved by MEW. The influence of applied voltage, temperature, and feeding pressure on printing outcomes behavior is optimized. Balancing these parameters, highly uniform and smooth-surfaced fibers with diameters ranging from 10 to 20 mu m result. The quality of the 3D MEW scaffolds is excellent, with very accurate fiber stacking capacityup to 50 layers with minimal defects and good fiber fusion between the layers. There is also minimal fiber sagging between the crossover points, which is a characteristic of thicker MEW scaffolds previously reported with other polymers. In summary, poly(urea-siloxane) demonstrates outstanding compatibility with the MEW process and represents a class of polymerthermoplastic elastomersthat are, until now, untested with this approach.

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