Gateways Toward Dissimilar Multi-material Parts

Date

2012-08

Advisors

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DOI

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Publisher

Society of Manufacturing Engineers

Type

Conference

Peer reviewed

Abstract

Nature provides a pattern of complex systems in which materials with vastly dissimilar properties grow together and function in close proximity. Although the gap between biological and existing AM systems cannot be overstated, the aspiration for AM to mimic this capability of nature has been widely admired (but is currently limited to multi-material parts made from families of like materials). The recent ASTM F2921 standard provides the first standardized framework to identify anisotropic properties of printed parts. This research highlights how understanding and quantifying the anisotropies between and within layers of printed parts provides foundational understanding to begin to emulate nature’s pattern by consolidating dissimilar multi-material parts in AM which promises future potential to supersede conventional part assembly with integral printed systems.

Description

Keywords

Additive Manufacturing, 3D Printing, multi-material, printed electronics, biomimicry, anisotropic properties, functional grading, standards

Citation

Jones, J.B., Cooper, D.E., Wimpenny, D.I. and Gibbons, G.J. (2012) SME Technical Paper TP12PUB36: Gateways Toward Dissimilar Multi-material Parts. RAPID 2012 and 3D Imaging Conferences & Exposition. Dearborn, MI, USA: Society of Manufacturing Engineers.

Rights

Research Institute