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Thermomechanical Material Characterization of Polyethylene Terephthalate Glycol with 30% Carbon Fiber for Large-Format Additive Manufacturing of Polymer Structures.

Katie A MartinGuillermo A RiverosTravis L ThornellZackery B McClellandElton L FreemanJames T Stinson
Published in: Polymers (2024)
Large-format additive manufacturing (LFAM) is used to print large-scale polymer structures. Understanding the thermal and mechanical properties of polymers suitable for large-scale extrusion is needed for design and production capabilities. An in-house-built LFAM printer was used to print polyethylene terephthalate glycol with 30% carbon fiber (PETG CF30%) samples for thermomechanical characterization. Thermogravimetric analysis (TGA) shows that the samples were 30% carbon fiber by weight. X-ray microscopy (XRM) and porosity studies find 25% voids/volume for undried material and 1.63% voids/volume for dry material. Differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) shows a glass transition temperature (T g ) of 66 °C, while dynamic mechanical analysis (DMA) found T g as 82 °C. The rheology indicated that PETG CF30% is a good printing material at 220-250 °C. Bending experiments show an average of 48.5 MPa for flexure strength, while tensile experiments found an average tensile strength of 25.0 MPa at room temperature. Comparison with 3D-printed PLA and PETG from the literature demonstrated that LFAM-printed PETG CF30% had a comparative high Young's modulus and had similar tensile strength. For design purposes, prints from LFAM should consider both material choice and print parameters, especially when considering large layer heights.
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