Material Characterization of 3D-printed Silicone Elastomers

被引:4
|
作者
Miron, Veronika M. [1 ]
Laemmermann, Sebastian [1 ]
Cakmak, Umut [1 ]
Major, Zoltan [1 ]
机构
[1] Johannes Kepler Univ Linz, Inst Polymer Prod Engn, Altenberger Str 69, A-4040 Linz, Austria
关键词
3D-printing; silicone elastomers; material characterization; additive manufacturing; material modelling;
D O I
10.1016/j.prostr.2021.12.010
中图分类号
TH [机械、仪表工业];
学科分类号
0802 ;
摘要
Silicone elastomers can be tailored to a broad range of mechanical properties and find application in damping, sealing, biomedicine, mold making, or prototyping. For additive manufacturing of silicone elastomers there are several approaches such as sub-surface catalysis, photo- or temperature-initiated polymerization feasible, which can further be divided in silicone extrusion, drop-ondemand, and vat photopolymerization. Many suppliers provide print services for silicone rubber components, nevertheless printing soft materials is still demanding and few printer component suppliers can be found. The processing (time-temperature history) of the cross-linked silicone rubber influences the properties of the 3D-printed part. Therefore, reliable material parameters are needed for product engineering and mechanical simulation. The objective of this work is to characterize and analyze the mechanical behavior of two 3D-printed silicone rubbers. Also, various infill amounts are examined to study the change of apparent hardness (structural macroscopic hardness) of the specimen. We developed an extrusion-based silicone 3D-printer with temperature-initiated polymerization using the print head vipro-HEAD 3/3 (ViscoTec Pumpen- u. Dosiertechnik GmbH, Germany). The printparameters were optimized for SilasticTM 3D 3335 (Dow, Michigan), which is currently the only commercially available material for this purpose (Shore A 50). Uniaxial tensile as well as compression, biaxial tension, and pure shear tests were performed to characterize the mechanical behavior of the 3D-printed specimens at different loading rates. Hyperelastic material models were fitted and compared in terms of the accuracy to accommodate the material behavior at room temperature. For a second softer silicone rubber (Shore A 10), the print parameters were optimized, and cubes were tested in compression. It could be shown that the harder material can reach lower apparent hardness than the softer material, when the infill amount is adjusted accordingly. (C) 2021 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V.
引用
收藏
页码:65 / 70
页数:6
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Material characterization and selection for 3D-printed spine models
    John Hao
    Raj Nangunoori
    Ying Ying Wu
    Mabaran Rajaraman
    Daniel Cook
    Alex Yu
    Boyle Cheng
    Kenji Shimada
    3D Printing in Medicine, 4 (1)
  • [2] 3D-printed nails for aesthetic silicone prostheses
    Lee, Felix Austin
    El Leow, Michael
    Yen, Ching Chiuan
    Wang, Wilson
    PROSTHETICS AND ORTHOTICS INTERNATIONAL, 2022, 46 (06) : 641 - 645
  • [3] 3D-PRINTED MATERIAL MIMICS CARTILAGE
    不详
    ADVANCED MATERIALS & PROCESSES, 2020, 178 (05): : 80 - 80
  • [4] 3D-Printed Silicone Materials with Hydrogen Getter Capability
    Ortiz-Acosta, Denisse
    Moore, Tanya
    Safarik, Douglas J.
    Hubbard, Kevin M.
    Janicke, Michael
    ADVANCED FUNCTIONAL MATERIALS, 2018, 28 (17)
  • [5] 3D-printed multifunctional, hyperelastic silicone rubber foam
    Chen, Qiyi
    Cao, Pengfei
    Advincula, Rigoberto
    ABSTRACTS OF PAPERS OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY, 2019, 258
  • [6] CHARACTERIZATION OF A 3D-PRINTED CONDUCTIVE PLA MATERIAL WITH ELECTRICALLY CONTROLLED STIFFNESS
    Al-Rubaiai, Mohammed
    Pinto, Thassyo
    Torres, David
    Sepulveda, Nelson
    Tan, Xiaobo
    PROCEEDINGS OF THE ASME CONFERENCE ON SMART MATERIALS, ADAPTIVE STRUCTURES AND INTELLIGENT SYSTEMS, 2017, VOL 1, 2017,
  • [7] Microstructural characterization of a 3D-printed soil
    Ferrari, Alessio
    Rosone, Marco
    La Rosa, Silvia
    Sapienza, Giovanni
    SOILS AND ROCKS, 2022, 45 (04):
  • [8] Characterization of 3D-Printed IPMC Actuators
    Carrico, James D.
    Erickson, John M.
    Leang, Kam K.
    ELECTROACTIVE POLYMER ACTUATORS AND DEVICES (EAPAD) 2016, 2016, 9798
  • [9] MATERIAL BEHAVIOURS IN 3D-PRINTED FASHION ITEMS
    Farahi, Behnaz
    ARCHITECTURAL DESIGN, 2017, 87 (06) : 84 - 91
  • [10] The Development of a 3D-Printed Compliant System for the Orientation of Payloads on Small Satellites: Material Characterization and Finite Element Analysis of 3D-Printed Polyetherketoneketone (PEKK)
    Domerg, Morgane
    Ostre, Benjamin
    Joliff, Yoann
    Grunevald, Yves-Henri
    Garcia, Antoine Dubois
    AEROSPACE, 2024, 11 (04)