4.7 Article

Partial Biodegradable Blend for Fused Filament Fabrication: In-Process Thermal and Post-Printing Moisture Resistance

期刊

POLYMERS
卷 14, 期 8, 页码 -

出版社

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/polym14081527

关键词

fused deposition modeling; polypropylene; polylactic acid; moisture-based degradation; pellet 3D printing

资金

  1. Massey Agrifood Digital (MAF) Labs, Massey University, New Zealand

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This research investigates the moisture-based degradation of a 3D-printed polypropylene and polylactic acid blend. The study proposes a combination of physical interlocking and chemical grafting to achieve stability against degradation. The results show that the partial blend with excessive interlocking exhibits high mechanical stability against moisture-based degradation.
Despite the extensive research, the moisture-based degradation of the 3D-printed polypropylene and polylactic acid blend is not yet reported. This research is a part of study reported on partial biodegradable blends proposed for large-scale additive manufacturing applications. However, the previous work does not provide information about the stability of the proposed blend system against moisture-based degradation. Therefore, this research presents a combination of excessive physical interlocking and minimum chemical grafting in a partial biodegradable blend to achieve stability against in-process thermal and moisture-based degradation. In this regard, a blend of polylactic acid and polypropylene compatibilized with polyethylene graft maleic anhydride is presented for fused filament fabrication. The research implements, for the first time, an ANOVA for combined thermal and moisture-based degradation. The results are explained using thermochemical and microscopic techniques. Scanning electron microscopy is used for analyzing the printed blend. Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy has allowed studying the intermolecular interactions due to the partial blending and degradation mechanism. Differential scanning calorimetry analyzes the blending (physical interlocking or chemical grafting) and thermochemical effects of the degradation mechanism. The thermogravimetric analysis further validates the physical interlocking and chemical grafting. The novel concept of partial blending with excessive interlocking reports high mechanical stability against moisture-based degradation.

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