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Importance of Polymer Rheology on Material Extrusion Additive Manufacturing: Correlating Process Physics to Print Properties

期刊

ACS APPLIED POLYMER MATERIALS
卷 3, 期 3, 页码 1218-1249

出版社

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsapm.0c01228

关键词

3D printing; material extrusion; polymer rheology; die swell; interlayer adhesion; polymer diffusion

资金

  1. Adhesives and Sealants Graduate Research Assistantship from the Macromolecules Innovation Institute (MII) at Virginia Tech

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Material extrusion (MatEx) is an additive manufacturing technique for fabricating three-dimensional objects based on CAD files, and understanding the rheological properties of polymeric feedstocks is crucial. The rheological characteristics of polymers during MatEx process govern interlayer welding and mechanical performance of printed parts.
Recent advances in the field of additive manufacturing (AM) or 3D printing, have garnered serious interest for its potential to substitute time-consuming and costly subtractive and formative manufacturing techniques. Material extrusion (MatEx), employing filament and pelletbased feedstocks, is an AM technique for fabricating three-dimensional objects dictated by a computer-aided design (CAD) file in a layer-by-layer manner. Being inherently a melt-and-form technique, the physics of MatEx is strongly dependent on the melt flow behavior of the polymers and hence on their rheology. The focus of this review article is to analyze the current progress in rheological characterizations of filament and pellet-based polymeric feedstocks for application in MatEx. The importance of shear and temperature-dependent viscosities in relation to consistent extrusion through the print nozzle and in the standoff region between nozzle and bed will be highlighted. The importance of shear and/or extensional viscosities and extent of die swell (upon exit from the nozzle) experienced by the polymers under processing parameters relevant to MatEx will be investigated. Postextrusion from the nozzle, the rheological characteristics of the viscous polymer melt as it cools once deposited on the print bed governs the degree of interlayer welding, that impacts the mechanical performance of the printed parts. Controlling and monitoring rheological properties such as zero-shear viscosities and shear moduli of the melt is of significant importance in this region in order to ensure proper mechanical robustness and shape integrity of the deposited layers. Both experimental and theoretical approaches based on polymer chain reptation mechanisms will be reviewed in detail and suggestions to address the existing limitations associated with the process will be provided. Fundamental understanding of the correlation between the classical theories and current understanding based on recent experimentation and analysis is expected to assist the design and development of the next generation of polymer feedstocks and machine designs for MatEx-based AM.

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