How Does Thermal Aging Impact 3D Printed Carbon Fiber Parts?

Advances in developing composites for additive manufacturing have accelerated in the last few years, with increasing research and innovation in both, desktop and industrial AM using composites, using chopped or continuous fiber technology, with carbon fibers or nanotubes, or glass fibers most typically used for reinforcement.

3D printed composite materials and sandwich structures (lightweight core sandwiched by thin face sheets) have been the subject of increasing research at universities and national laboratories. But the focus has been more on studying compressive failure, load-carrying capacity, ductility, morphology, tensile or friction properties. This study, published in the Polymer Testing Journal, is a collaboration between researchers at Deakin University (Australia) and University of Siegen (Germany), and the focus was to investigate the impact to performance or properties in 3D printed composite (specifically cores) structures caused by accelerated thermal aging.

The authors chose to focus here due to a lack of investigative research in this area, and more pertinently, because such 3D printed materials/structures will be applied in various temperature conditions, and understanding how temperature impacts their mechanical properties and molecular structures would inform future applications and materials development. Indeed, composite material development and applications using AM are rapidly growing with the market for composites expected to reach $10 billion by 2028, as per SmarTech’s 2018 report, including part production, hardware and materials. Aerospace and medical industry applications are key drivers for composites at present, but that is expected to expand soon into other industries of automotive, construction, energy and consumer products.

FDM (using a FlashForge Creator Pro) was chosen to fabricate two types of composite structure, using ABS and ASA (acrylonitrile styrene acrylate) with carbon fiber face sheets. Two topological structures for the core were fabricated, one truss or triangle-like, and the other, honeycomb or hexagonal. To understand the effects of loading and thermal aging on the structures, compression, tensile and three point bending tests were used to study the mechanical behavior and failure of these components.

   Image Courtesy of Polymer Testing 91 (2020) Journal / Deakin University

The study also hinted toward how continuous fiber reinforcement may provide improved failure load properties over chopped fiber, since initial failure tended to occur at filament intersections within cell walls: “the honeycomb cells had better properties, as there is more continuous filaments between cell walls. The thermal aging also had a greater affect on these joins, as the relaxation and restructuring of the molecules increased the toughness of the join.”

To simulate thermal aging, specimens were ‘aged’ by subjecting them to changing temperatures in a climate test chamber. The max/min temperatures were 60 degrees and 22 degrees Celsius (below the glass temperature of polymers), with an automated, high precision and accuracy device, controlling the rate of temperature change at 1 degree Celsius/minute.

Image Courtesy of Polymer Testing 91 (2020) Journal / Deakin University

It was found that the honeycomb structure with ASA had the higher flexural strength, higher strain-to-load properties, and overall higher load carrying capacity (with ABS or ASA), and that thermal aging increased the maximum strength due to annealing (and molecular structure changes) in specimens with both patterns and materials. The annealing seemed to strengthen the bonds between layers and the print beads. The impacts due to thermal aging could also largely be attributed to aging time, with aging temperature having no significant effect. Thermally aged specimens also had better stiffness and failure load properties, with flexural stress being 15% higher than unaged specimens. In addition, the ASA core failed at a higher strain than the ABS core.

Interestingly, Deakin University is considered to be among the leading research and educational institutions in AM in the country, and worldwide. In 2017, Ian Gibson, Professor of Additive Manufacturing at the university, received the International Freeform and Additive Manufacturing Excellence (FAME) recognizing his lifetime achievements and contributions to 3D printing – which include coauthoring the influential ‘Additive Manufacturing Technologies’ that sold over 300,000 copies, establishing the Rapid Prototyping Journal and the Global Alliance of Rapid Prototyping Associations. Last month, the university launched a research and education program focused on MELD technology, an innovative open-air metal AM technology that can build parts, large or small, without melting any metal. In collaboration with US-based MELD Manufacturing Corporation, the university has placed a MELD machine at its Advanced Metal Manufacture Facility and plans to fund further research into materials, efficiency, and applications for MELD technology.

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Acoustically Assembled Multidimensional Filler Networks 3D Printed Polymer Composites for Thermal Management

In ‘3D-printed polymer composites with acoustically assembled multidimensional filler networks for accelerated heat dissipation,’ authors Lu Lu, Zhifeng Zhang, Jie Xu, and Yayue Pa explore a new technique for printing composites with filler that could eliminate overheating in electronics. Part of the challenge for the researchers in this project was in thermal management and finding a balance in filler loading.

With acoustic field-assisted projection stereolithography, the research team focused on using just a small amount of filler to create a network of heat-diverting paths. This work could be critical to a variety of different applications, as many electronics are overloaded due to heating and may fail completely; in fact, the researchers include data from a U.S. Air Force survey reporting that over half of their issues with electronics are due to overheating. These problems need to be solved, in military applications especially, but also in other fields centered around chipsets, wearables, and flexible electronics.

Acoustic Field Assisted Projection Stereolithography (A-PSL) setup

Polymer composites are ‘promising’ due to their conductive qualities, along with being insulating and flexible. The traditional method involves mixing fillers in the matrix, with some success in adding ‘heavy filler loading.’ Historically, however, this has led to problems such as:

  • Clogging
  • Difficulty in mixing
  • Agglomeration
  • Trouble in filler embedding
  • Limited manipulation of filler distribution
  • Orientation issues

“Additionally, the manufactured composites with heavy filler loading usually suffer from insufficient binding, mechanical deterioration, and thermal expansion coefficient mismatch,” state the researchers. “The disordered distribution of fillers limits thermal performance enhancement due to the phonon scattering between isolated fillers.”

a. Photograph of parallel filler line pattern in liquid resin; SEM images of b.The uniform composite, c. The patterned composite, d. Acoustically assembled filler microstructure in cross-sectional view. (Filler: aluminum powder).

3D printing offers better results in alignment and orientation, but also allows for multi-material fabrication. Here, the researchers see the potential for superior performance with their acoustic-field-based filler manipulation technique, including the following features:

  • Filler distribution controls
  • Lack of manufacturing restrictions
  • No filler shape or property requirements

The module is made up of electro-piezo elements, a function generator, and an amplifier.

 “A function generator provides the sinusoidal signal with adjustable frequency and voltage. This signal is applied to the electro-piezo element after amplified. The piezo element actuation leads to structural deformation of the PET film, which subsequently induces an acoustic field in the filler-resin suspension. The acoustic radiation force drives fillers to the pressure nodes of the acoustic field to form a pattern,” state the researchers.

The team created five different composites, P1-P5, with the three patterned composites (P2, P3, P4) exhibiting better performance due to their 3D particle assembly networks—causing the researchers to state that the samples ‘proved the effects’ of filler assembly in regard to the new composite and technique.

a. Schematics of unit layers. b. Photograph of a printed sample P-1 and its microscopic images. c. Schematics of different filler distribution patterns and the microscopic images of fabricated samples in side views.

“By controlling the manufacturing parameters, such as the layer thickness and the projection mask, multidimensional filler networks formed,” concluded the researchers. “Multidirectional heat transfer paths provided by multidimensional filler networks accelerate the cooling process in the isolated polymer matrix. With the same feedstock or even the same number of particles filled in the polymer matrix, the patterned composites are superior to the uniform composite with significantly higher heat dissipation efficiencies.

“Future work will be to quantify the relationship of composite functionality with particle pattern design parameters.”

Composites are accentuating the realm of 3D printing materials as users in research, development, engineering, and industrial settings around the world seek better ways to make prototypes and products, including bioprinting structures—from graphene reinforced nanocomposites to wood composites and chitosan-gelatin hydrogels.

Find out more about 3D printing polymer composites for electronics here. What do you think of this news? Let us know your thoughts! Join the discussion of this and other 3D printing topics at 3DPrintBoard.com.

[Source / Images: ‘3D-printed polymer composites with acoustically assembled multidimensional filler networks for accelerated heat dissipation’]

Illustration of the cooling experiment.