Fused Filament Fabrication-Based Additive Manufacturing of Commercially Pure Titanium

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Fused Filament Fabrication-Based Additive Manufacturing of Commercially Pure Titanium. / Thompson, Yvonne; Polzer, Markus; Gonzalez-Gutierrez, Joamin et al.
in: Advanced Engineering Materials, Jahrgang 23.2021, Nr. 12, 2100380, 12.09.2021.

Publikationen: Beitrag in FachzeitschriftArtikelForschung(peer-reviewed)

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Thompson Y, Polzer M, Gonzalez-Gutierrez J, Kasian O, Heckl JP, Dalbauer V et al. Fused Filament Fabrication-Based Additive Manufacturing of Commercially Pure Titanium. Advanced Engineering Materials. 2021 Sep 12;23.2021(12):2100380. doi: 10.1002/adem.202100380

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@article{08bbefbf0a274859bfde1fce584268de,
title = "Fused Filament Fabrication-Based Additive Manufacturing of Commercially Pure Titanium",
abstract = "Fabrication of titanium components is very cost intensive, partly due to the complex machining and limited recyclability of waste material. For electrochemical applications, the excellent corrosion resistance of pure titanium is of high importance, whereas medium mechanical strength of fabricated parts is sufficient for such a use case. For smaller parts, metal fused filament fabrication (MF3) enables the fabrication of complex metallic structures densified during a final sintering step. Pure titanium can be processed to near-net-shape geometries for electrochemical applications if the parameters and the atmosphere during sintering are carefully monitored. Herein, the influence of thermal debinding and sintering parameters on the fabrication of high-density pure titanium using MF3 is investigated. Particular focus is placed on enhancing sintered density while limiting impurity uptake to conserve the high chemical purity of the initial powder material. Relative densities of 95% are repeatedly reached inside the bulk of the samples. An oxygen content of 0.56 wt% as a result of vacuum processing induces the formation of the retained α-Ti phase (925 HV0.2) inside the α matrix (295 HV0.2). Fabricated parts exhibit high mechanical strength, albeit reduced elongation due to remaining pores, and, in terms of electrochemistry, enhanced stability toward anodic dissolution.",
author = "Yvonne Thompson and Markus Polzer and Joamin Gonzalez-Gutierrez and Olga Kasian and Heckl, {Johannes P.} and Valentin Dalbauer and Christian Kukla and Peter Felfer",
year = "2021",
month = sep,
day = "12",
doi = "10.1002/adem.202100380",
language = "English",
volume = "23.2021",
journal = "Advanced Engineering Materials",
issn = "1527-2648",
publisher = "Wiley-VCH ",
number = "12",

}

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TY - JOUR

T1 - Fused Filament Fabrication-Based Additive Manufacturing of Commercially Pure Titanium

AU - Thompson, Yvonne

AU - Polzer, Markus

AU - Gonzalez-Gutierrez, Joamin

AU - Kasian, Olga

AU - Heckl, Johannes P.

AU - Dalbauer, Valentin

AU - Kukla, Christian

AU - Felfer, Peter

PY - 2021/9/12

Y1 - 2021/9/12

N2 - Fabrication of titanium components is very cost intensive, partly due to the complex machining and limited recyclability of waste material. For electrochemical applications, the excellent corrosion resistance of pure titanium is of high importance, whereas medium mechanical strength of fabricated parts is sufficient for such a use case. For smaller parts, metal fused filament fabrication (MF3) enables the fabrication of complex metallic structures densified during a final sintering step. Pure titanium can be processed to near-net-shape geometries for electrochemical applications if the parameters and the atmosphere during sintering are carefully monitored. Herein, the influence of thermal debinding and sintering parameters on the fabrication of high-density pure titanium using MF3 is investigated. Particular focus is placed on enhancing sintered density while limiting impurity uptake to conserve the high chemical purity of the initial powder material. Relative densities of 95% are repeatedly reached inside the bulk of the samples. An oxygen content of 0.56 wt% as a result of vacuum processing induces the formation of the retained α-Ti phase (925 HV0.2) inside the α matrix (295 HV0.2). Fabricated parts exhibit high mechanical strength, albeit reduced elongation due to remaining pores, and, in terms of electrochemistry, enhanced stability toward anodic dissolution.

AB - Fabrication of titanium components is very cost intensive, partly due to the complex machining and limited recyclability of waste material. For electrochemical applications, the excellent corrosion resistance of pure titanium is of high importance, whereas medium mechanical strength of fabricated parts is sufficient for such a use case. For smaller parts, metal fused filament fabrication (MF3) enables the fabrication of complex metallic structures densified during a final sintering step. Pure titanium can be processed to near-net-shape geometries for electrochemical applications if the parameters and the atmosphere during sintering are carefully monitored. Herein, the influence of thermal debinding and sintering parameters on the fabrication of high-density pure titanium using MF3 is investigated. Particular focus is placed on enhancing sintered density while limiting impurity uptake to conserve the high chemical purity of the initial powder material. Relative densities of 95% are repeatedly reached inside the bulk of the samples. An oxygen content of 0.56 wt% as a result of vacuum processing induces the formation of the retained α-Ti phase (925 HV0.2) inside the α matrix (295 HV0.2). Fabricated parts exhibit high mechanical strength, albeit reduced elongation due to remaining pores, and, in terms of electrochemistry, enhanced stability toward anodic dissolution.

U2 - 10.1002/adem.202100380

DO - 10.1002/adem.202100380

M3 - Article

VL - 23.2021

JO - Advanced Engineering Materials

JF - Advanced Engineering Materials

SN - 1527-2648

IS - 12

M1 - 2100380

ER -