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      Controlling anisotropy and brittle-to-ductile transitions by varying extrusion width in short fibre reinforced additive manufacturing

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      Rapid Prototyping Journal
      Emerald

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          Abstract

          Purpose

          Extrusion width, the width of printed filaments, affects multiple critical aspects in mechanical properties in material extrusion additive manufacturing: filament geometry, interlayer load-bearing bonded area and fibre orientation for fibre-reinforced composites. However, this study aims to understand the effects of extrusion width on 3D printed composites, which has never been studied systematically.

          Design/methodology/approach

          Four polymers with and without short-fibre reinforcement were 3D printed into single-filament-wide specimens. Tensile properties, mechanical anisotropy and fracture mechanisms were evaluated along the direction of extruded filaments (F) and normal to the interlayer bond (Z). Extrusion width, nozzle temperature and layer height were studied separately via single-variable control. The extrusion width was controlled by adjusting polymer flow in the manufacturing procedure (gcode), where optimisation can be achieved with software/structure design as opposed to hardware.

          Findings

          Increasing extrusion width caused a transition from brittle to ductile fracture, and greatly reduced directional anisotropy for strength and ductility. For all short fibre composites, increasing width led to an increase in strain-at-break and decreased strength and stiffness in the F direction. In the Z direction, increasing width led to increased strength and strain-at-break, and stiffness decreased for less ductile materials but increased for more ductile materials.

          Originality/value

          The transformable fracture reveals the important role of extrusion width in processing-structure-property correlation. This study reveals a new direction for future research and industrial practice in controlling anisotropy in additive manufacturing. Increasing extrusion width may be the simplest way to reduce anisotropy while improving printing time and quality in additive manufacturing.

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          Most cited references35

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          Optimization of fused deposition modeling process parameters: a review of current research and future prospects

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            Highly oriented carbon fiber–polymer composites via additive manufacturing

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              FDM process parameters influence over the mechanical properties of polymer specimens: A review

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Rapid Prototyping Journal
                RPJ
                Emerald
                1355-2546
                1355-2546
                September 27 2023
                January 02 2024
                September 27 2023
                January 02 2024
                : 30
                : 1
                : 33-48
                Article
                10.1108/RPJ-09-2022-0315
                676f4b0d-e1be-42cb-9043-b5e4e81bf8df
                © 2024

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