Strength of additive manufactured alumina Schlacher, J.; Lube, T.; Harrer, W. ...
Journal of the European Ceramic Society,
November 2020, 2020-11-00, Volume:
40, Issue:
14
Journal Article
Peer reviewed
Open access
The strength of 3D-printed alumina parts fabricated using the Lithography-based Ceramic Manufacturing (LCM) technology is investigated. The influence of the sintering parameters, printing direction, ...surface condition (i.e. machined or as-printed), and/or geometry on the strength distribution is studied under uniaxial and biaxial bending tests. Weibull parameters, i.e. characteristic strength and Weibull modulus, are determined and compared between the different samples. Experimental findings show that samples sintered at higher temperatures yield higher Weibull modulus, associated with a more homogeneous microstructure. Fractographic analyses reveal the influence of surface finish (as-printed or machined) on strength and show the importance of reporting testing configuration along with printing direction to assess the mechanical response of 3D-printed parts. Based on these results, manufacturing recommendations are given which shall advance the progress in optimization of alumina ceramics fabricated using the LCM technology.
ABSTRACTMetamaterials possess properties not found in nature and are expected to revolutionise the design of structural components. However large-scale production of metallic metamaterials remains ...locked due to the compromise between print size and resolution in existing metal 3D printing methods. We unlock the possibility of 3D printing of stainless steel metamaterials across scales using lithography metal manufacturing, a vat photopolymerisation technology that uses digital light processing (DLP) on metal-filled resin to 3D print a green body for further debinding and sintering in a furnace. Here in, were explore the effects of energy dose on overpolymerisation, minimal feature size, and print resolution as well as the effects of sintering temperature on microstructure, shape stability, and mechanical properties of 3D printed metamaterials. It has become possible to 3D print steel metamaterials with a twist and auxetic metamaterials with micro-scaled structures on a decimetre scale. Our benchmarking experiments demonstrate that lithography metal manufacturing competes with laser powder bed fusion regarding print accuracy, surface roughness, and design freedom and provides a viable solution for translating metallic metamaterials from laboratories to markets.