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Fluoropolymer-based 3D printable pyrotechnic compositionsGrobler, Johannes Marthinus January 2017 (has links)
The work herein covers the complete process for development, production and testing of a melt processable pyrotechnic composition, with the goal of using the composition as a printing material in a fused deposition modelling (FDM) type 3D printer. 3D printing is fast becoming an area of interest for energetic materials research. This is due to the role that geometry can play in combustion performance of a composition and 3D printing’s ability to produce a variety of complex designs.
Melt processable fluoropolymers were selected as oxidisers. The polymers selected for the study were FK-800® and Dyneon 31508®. Both are co-polymers of vinylidene fluoride (VDF) and chlorotrifluoroethylene (CTFE). Aluminium was the choice fuel in this instance as it had better energetic performance than the alternatives investigated. It was also deemed to be a safer fuel when considering the combustion products. Hazardous combustion products like hydrofluoric and hydrochloric acid could be suppressed by increasing the fuel loading to 30 wt.%, thereby reducing the risks associated with burning the composition.
Preliminary differential thermal analysis (DTA) analysis indicated that the compositions would only ignite above 400 °C which was well above the suggested processing temperature of 230 °C as determined from thermogravimetric (TGA) analysis. These thermal analysis techniques indicated that the reactions were most likely a gas-solid reactions due to ignition temperatures being significantly lower than those associated with phase changes occurring in the fuels tested, yet above the decomposition temperatures for the oxidisers.
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Extrusion of the compositions proceeded with addition of LFC-1® liquid fluoroelastomer. This addition was made in order to order to lower the melt viscosity, thereby improving the quality of the filament produced. Compositions were extruded with an aluminium loading of 30 wt.%. Oxidiser and LFC-1® made up the rest of the mass with the LFC-1® contributions being either 7 wt.% or 14 wt.%.
Burn rates, temperatures and ignition delays were all influenced by the addition of LFC-1® to the system. FK-800® was found to be a better oxidiser in this instance since its burn rates were consistent especially when compared to erratic nature of the Dyneon 31508® burns. Linear burn rates for the FK-800® increased from 15.9 mm·s−1 to 18.9 mm·s−1 with the increase in LFC-1® loading. Combustion temperature also increased by approximately 180 °C from 794 °C.
Printing with the material was achieved only after significant alterations were made to the hot end used. Printing proceeded in a staged, start-stop manner. After each new layer of material was deposited the printer was cleared of material and the hot end was allowed to cool. If this procedure was not followed it led to significant preheating of the material within the feeding section of the extruder. This premature heating caused feeding problems due to softening and swelling of the material within the cold side of the hot end which led to blockages, leading to the conclusion that the composition was not compatible with the off-the-shelf hot end used in this study. Low quality printing could be achieved with both FK-800® and Dyneon 31508® compositions. This would suggest that slight compositional changes paired with the alterations made to the hot end could improve the quality of the prints to an extent that would be comparable to that of more commonplace printing materials. / Dissertation (MEng)--University of Pretoria, 2017. / Chemical Engineering / MEng / Unrestricted
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Assessment of Ti-6Al-4V Laser Clad RepairPaul Francis Gardner (12429849) 19 April 2022 (has links)
<p>Damaged components and a lack of spare components are issues which are currently affecting military aircraft capability. Laser Cladding is an additive manufacturing technique which shows promise in repairing damaged aviation components. However, there are considerable certification requirements for critical components which stand to gain the most benefits from laser clad repair methodologies. These requirements involve establishing crack growth rate data for the laser clad material to gain confidence in the reliability of the repair's performance on in-service aircraft. This research seeks to understand the fatigue behavior of Ti-6Al-4V that has undergone a simulated laser clad repair, with unrepaired specimens also tested to allow for comparison. </p>
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Advancing melt electrospinning writing for fabrication of biomimetic structures / Entwicklung des Melt Electrospinning Writing zur Erzeugung biomimetischer StrukturenHochleitner, Gernot January 2018 (has links) (PDF)
In order to mimic the extracellular matrix for tissue engineering, recent research approaches often involve 3D printing or electrospinning of fibres to scaffolds as cell carrier material. Within this thesis, a micron fibre printing process, called melt electrospinning writing (MEW), combining both additive manufacturing and electrospinning, has been investigated and improved. Thus, a unique device was developed for accurate process control and manufacturing of high quality constructs. Thereby, different studies could be conducted in order to understand the electrohydrodynamic printing behaviour of different medically relevant thermoplastics as well as to characterise the influence of MEW on the resulting scaffold performance.
For reproducible scaffold printing, a commonly occurring processing instability was investigated and defined as pulsing, or in extreme cases as long beading. Here, processing analysis could be performed with the aim to overcome those instabilities and prevent the resulting manufacturing issues. Two different biocompatible polymers were utilised for this study: poly(ε-caprolactone) (PCL) as the only material available for MEW until then and poly(2-ethyl-2-oxazoline) for the first time. A hypothesis including the dependency of pulsing regarding involved mass flows regulated by the feeding pressure and the electrical field strength could be presented. Further, a guide via fibre diameter quantification was established to assess and accomplish high quality printing of scaffolds for subsequent research tasks.
By following a combined approach including small sized spinnerets, small flow rates and high field strengths, PCL fibres with submicron-sized fibre diameters (fØ = 817 ± 165 nm) were deposited to defined scaffolds. The resulting material characteristics could be investigated regarding molecular orientation and morphological aspects. Thereby, an alignment and isotropic crystallinity was observed that can be attributed to the distinct acceleration of the solidifying jet in the electrical field and by the collector uptake. Resulting submicron fibres formed accurate but mechanically sensitive structures requiring further preparation for a suitable use in cell biology. To overcome this handling issue, a coating procedure, by using hydrophilic and cross-linkable star-shaped molecules for preparing fibre adhesive but cell repellent collector surfaces, was used.
Printing PCL fibre patterns below the critical translation speed (CTS) revealed the opportunity to manufacture sinusoidal shaped fibres analogously to those observed using purely viscous fluids falling on a moving belt. No significant influence of the high voltage field during MEW processing could be observed on the buckling phenomenon. A study on the sinusoidal geometry revealed increasing peak-to-peak values and decreasing wavelengths as a function of decreasing collector speeds sc between CTS > sc ≥ 2/3 CTS independent of feeding pressures. Resulting scaffolds printed at 100 %, 90 %, 80 % and 70 % of CTS exhibited significantly different tensile properties, foremost regarding Young’s moduli (E = 42 ± 7 MPa to 173 ± 22 MPa at 1 – 3 % strain). As known from literature, a changed morphology and mechanical environment can impact cell performance substantially leading to a new opportunity of tailoring TE scaffolds.
Further, poly(L-lactide-co-ε-caprolactone-co-acryloyl carbonate) as well as poly(ε-caprolactone-co-acryloyl carbonate) (PCLAC) copolymers could be used for MEW printing. Those exhibit the opportunity for UV-initiated radical cross-linking in a post-processing step leading to significantly increased mechanical characteristics. Here, single fibres of the polymer composed of 90 mol.% CL and 10 mol.% AC showed a considerable maximum tensile strength of σmax = 53 ± 16 MPa. Furthermore, sinusoidal meanders made of PCLAC yielded a specific tensile stress-strain characteristic mimicking the qualitative behaviour of tendons or ligaments. Cell viability by L929 murine fibroblasts and live/dead staining with human mesenchymal stem cells revealed a promising biomaterial behaviour pointing out MEW printed PCLAC scaffolds as promising choice for medical repair of load-bearing soft tissue.
Indeed, one apparent drawback, the small throughput similar to other AM methods, may still prevent MEW’s industrial application yet. However, ongoing research focusses on enlargement of manufacturing speed with the clear perspective of relevant improvement. Thereby, the utilisation of large spinneret sizes may enable printing of high volume rates, while downsizing the resulting fibre diameter via electrical field and mechanical stretching by the collector uptake. Using this approach, limitations of FDM by small nozzle sizes could be overcome. Thinking visionary, such printing devices could be placed in hospitals for patient-specific printing-on-demand therapies one day. Taking the evolved high deposition precision combined with the unique small fibre diameter sizes into account, technical processing of high performance membranes, filters or functional surface finishes also stands to reason. / Um biomimetische extrazelluläre Matrices für das Tissue Engineering herzustellen, bedienen sich aktuelle Forschungsansätze oftmals der Produktion von Faser-Konstrukten durch additive Fertigung oder Elektrospinn-Verfahren. Das sogenannte Melt Electrospinning Writing (MEW) kombiniert Vorteile beider Techniken und weist dadurch ein hohes Applikationspotential auf. Daher bestand das Ziel der vorliegenden Arbeit in der Weiterentwicklung und Erforschung des MEW. Für diesen Zweck wurde eine neuartige Forschungsanlage konzipiert und gebaut, welche mit einzigartiger Verfahrenspräzision und Prozesskontrolle die Fertigung von hochqualitativen Konstrukten ermöglichte. Auf Basis dessen konnten die durchgeführten Studien das Verständnis des elektrohydrodynamischen Druckvorgangs und der untersuchten Prozessparameter vertiefen und letztendlich zur Ausweitung des Verfahrens auf neue medizinisch relevante Thermoplaste beitragen.
Um eine reproduzierbare Herstellung von Scaffolds zu ermöglichen, wurde eine häufig auftretende Prozessinstabilität erforscht und als pulsing, oder in stark ausgeprägten Fällen als long beading, klassifiziert. Durch Prozessanalyse konnte zudem eine Methode zur Vermeidung dieser Instabilität entwickelt werden. Dafür wurden zwei unterschiedliche biokompatible Polymere verwendet: Poly(ε-Caprolacton) (PCL) als bis dahin einziger verfügbarer MEW Werkstoff, sowie erstmalig Poly(2-Ethyl-2-Oxazolin). Die aufgestellte Hypothese umfasst eine universelle Abhängigkeit der pulsing Instabilität zu involvierten Massenströmen, welche durch Anpassung des angelegten Prozessdruckes und der elektrischen Feldstärke reguliert werden kann. Um ein optimales Prozessergebnis für nachfolgende Forschungsarbeiten zu erzielen, wurde zusätzlich ein Leitfaden zur quantitativen Bewertung des Grades der Instabilität bereitgestellt.
Durch Kombination kleiner Spinndüsen, kleiner Schmelze-Flussraten und hoher elektrischen Feldstärken, konnten erstmalig PCL Fasern mit sub-mikron Durchmessern (fØ = 817 ± 165 nm) zu präzisen Scaffolds verarbeitet werden. Diese wurden anschließend durch materialwissenschaftliche Analytik charakterisiert. Dabei wurde eine molekulare Vorzugsorientierung und isotrope Kristallausrichtung entlang der Faser beobachtet, welche durch den hohen Verstreckungsgrad des erstarrenden Polymerstrahls erklärt werden konnte. Resultierende sub-mikron Fasern konnten zwar für einen akkuraten Druckvorgang verwendet werden, jedoch erwiesen sich die Strukturen als instabil und daher nicht geeignet für die Handhabung bei Zellkulturstudien. Aus diesem Grund wurde ein Beschichtungsansatz mittels hydrophilen und vernetzbaren Sternmolekülen für Substratflächen herangezogen. Während solche modifizierten Oberflächen bekanntermaßen Zelladhäsion verhindern, konnten gedruckte sub-mikron Scaffolds auf der Oberfläche haften und so für biologische Studien verwendet werden.
Durch das gezielte Ablegen von Fasern unterhalb der kritischen Translationsgeschwindigkeit (CTS) des Kollektors, konnten sinusförmige Faserstrukturen erzeugt werden. Analog zu rein viskosen Fluiden, welche durch ein bewegliches Band aufgesammelt werden, schien dieser Vorgang dem sogenannten buckling zu unterliegen und daher phänomenologisch nicht oder nur geringfügig vom elektrischen Feld abhängig zu sein. Zudem konnte eine durchgeführte Studie die direkte Abhängigkeit der Fasergeometrie mit der Kollektorbewegung belegen. Unabhängig vom Prozessdruck, führte eine verminderte Kollektorgeschwindigkeit sc in den Grenzen CTS > sc ≥ 2/3 CTS zu erhöhten Amplituden bzw. Spitze-zu-Spitze Werten und verkürzten Wellenlängen. Durch das kontrollierte Ablegen der Fasern bei Geschwindigkeiten von 100 %, 90 % 80 % und 70 % CTS konnten zudem Scaffolds mit unterschiedlichen mechanischen Eigenschaften hergestellt werden. Speziell der Zugmodul wurde dadurch etwa um eine halbe Größenordnung moduliert (Es = 42 ± 7 MPa bis 173 ± 22 MPa bei 1 – 3 % Dehnung). Dies ist in Kombination mit der Strukturierung für maßgeschneiderte TE Scaffolds von großem Interesse, da zelluläre Systeme sensibel auf ihre Umgebung reagieren können.
Des Weiteren wurden Poly(L-Lactid-co-ε-Caprolacton-co-Acryloylcarbonat) und Poly(ε-Caprolacton-co-Acryloylcarbonat) (PCLAC) Copolymere hinsichtlich deren MEW Verarbeitbarkeit untersucht. Solche Kunststoffe können nach dem Druckvorgang mit UV-Strahlung radikalisch vernetzt werden und dadurch deutlich erhöhte mechanische Eigenschaften ausbilden. Für Fasern aus 90 mol.% CL und 10 mol.% AC wurden beispielsweise maximale Zugfestigkeiten von σmax = 53 ± 16 MPa ermittelt. MEW gedruckte sinusförmige Faserstrukturen aus PCLAC wiesen darüber hinaus ein biomimetisches Spannungs-Dehnung-Verhalten auf, vergleichbar zu Sehnen- und Ligamentgewebe. Eine Untersuchung der Zellviabilität von L929 murinen Fibroblasten im Eluattest, sowie eine lebend/tot-Färbung von humanen mesenchymalen Stammzellen auf den Scaffolds, ergab vielversprechende Resultate und damit ein relevantes Anwendungspotential solcher Strukturen als Implantat.
Neben genannten Vorteilen, weist MEW als Verfahren bislang allerdings geringe Produktionsgeschwindigkeiten auf. Diese sind daher in den Fokus aktueller Forschungsvorhaben gerückt. Einen Ansatz hierfür bieten Spinndüsen mit hohem Innendurchmesser und erhöhter Austragsrate, wobei die optimierte elektrische Feldstärke, sowie ein Verstrecken durch die Kollektorbewegung, zu den erwünschten dünnen Fasern führen können. Dadurch kann die abwärtslimitierte Düsengröße des FDM Verfahrens überwunden werden. Visionär gedacht, könnte eine solche Anlage direkt in Krankenhäusern zur Fertigung von patienten- und defektspezifischen Implantaten eingesetzt werden. Darüber hinaus ermöglicht die hohe Präzision, zusammen mit dem Drucken von Mikro-Fasern, einen technischen Einsatz zur Herstellung von Membranen, Filtern oder funktionalen Oberflächenbeschichtungen.
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Coating processes towards selective laser sintering of energetic material compositesJiba, Zetu January 2019 (has links)
This research aims to contribute to the safe methodology for additive manufacturing (AM) of
energetic materials. Coating formulation processes were investigated to find a suitable method
that may enable selective laser sintering (SLS) as the safe method for fabrication of high
explosive (HE) compositions. For safety and convenience reasons, the concept demonstration
was conducted using inert explosive simulants with properties quasi-similar to the real HE.
Coating processes for simulant RDX-based microparticles by means of PCL and 3,4,5-
trimethoxybenzaldehyde (as TNT simulant) are reported. These processes were evaluated for
uniformity of coating the HE inert simulant particles with binder materials to facilitate the SLS
as the adequate binding and fabrication method. The critical constraints being the coating
effectiveness required, spherical particle morphology, micron size range (>20 μm) and a good
powder deposition and flow, and performance under SLS to make the method applicable for
HEs.
Of the coating processes investigated, suspension system and single emulsion methods gave
required particle near spherical morphology, size and uniform coating. The suspension process
appears to be suitable for the SLS of HE mocks and potential formulation methods for active
HE composites. The density was estimated to be comparable with the current HE compositions
and plastic bonded explosives (PBXs) such as C4 and PE4, produced from traditional methods. The formulation method developed and the understanding of the science behind the processes
paves the way toward safe SLS of the active HE compositions and may open avenues for further
research and development of munitions of the future. / Dissertation (MSc (Applied Science:Chemical Technology))--University of Pretoria, 2019. / Chemical Engineering / MSc (Applied Science:Chemical Technology) / Unrestricted
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Design of Self-supported 3D Printed Parts for Fused Deposition ModelingLischke, Fabian January 2016 (has links)
Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI) / One of the primary challenges faced in Additive Manufacturing (AM) is reducing the overall cost and printing time. A critical factor in cost and time reduction is post-processing of 3D printed (3DP) parts, which includes removing support structures. Support is needed to prevent the collapse of the part or certain areas under its own weight during the 3D printing process. Currently, the design of self-supported 3DP parts follows experimental trials. A trial and error process is needed to produce high quality parts by Fused Depositing Modeling (FDM). An example for a chamfer angle, is the common use of 45 degree angle in the AM process. Surfaces that are more flat show defects than inclined surfaces, and therefore a numerical model is needed. The model can predict the problematic areas at a print, reducing the experimental prints and providing a higher number of usable parts. Physical-based models have not been established due to the generally unknown properties of the material during the AM process. With simulations it is possible to simulate the part at different temperatures with a variety of other parameters that have influence on the behavior of the model. In this research, analytic calculations and physical tests are carried out to determine the material properties of the thermoplastic polymer Acrylonitrile - Butadiene - Styrene (ABS) for FDM at the time of extrusion. This means that the ABS is going to be extruded at 200C to 245C and is a viscus material during part construction. Using the results from the physical and analytical models, i.e., Timoshenko’s modified beam theory for micro structures, a numerical material model is established to simulate the filament deformation once it is deposited onto the part. Experiments were also used to find the threshold for different geometric specifications, which could then be applied to the numerical model to improve the accuracy of the simulation. The result of the nonlinear finite element analysis is compared to experiments to show the correlation between the prediction of deflection in simulation and the actual deflection measured in physical experiments. A case study was conducted using an application that optimizes topology of complex geometries. After modeling and simulating the optimized part, areas of defect and errors were determined in the simulation, then verified and and measured with actual 3D prints.
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Cost Estimation of Layer Additive Manufacturing using Break-down ApproachMahadik, Aditya U. 01 October 2018 (has links)
No description available.
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Design of Variable-Density Structures for Additive Manufacturing Using Gyroid LatticesZhang, Botao January 2018 (has links)
No description available.
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Conformal Lattice Structures in Additive Manufacturing (AM)Melpal, Gopalakrishna Ranjan January 2018 (has links)
No description available.
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SIMULATION OF METAL GRAIN GROWTH IN LASER POWDER BED FUSION PROCESS USING PHASE FIELD THERMAL COUPLED MODELHuang, Zhida 23 May 2019 (has links)
No description available.
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Rasters vs Contours For Thin Wall ULTEM 9085 FDM ApplicationsKota, Vasuman 04 September 2019 (has links)
No description available.
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