Special Binder Systems for Metal Powders in Highly Filled Filaments for Fused Filament Fabrication

Research output: Contribution to conferencePosterResearch

Standard

Special Binder Systems for Metal Powders in Highly Filled Filaments for Fused Filament Fabrication. / Gonzalez-Gutierrez, Joamin; Cano Cano, Santiago; Ecker, Josef et al.
2017. 1 Poster session presented at 33rd international conference of the polymer processing society, Cancún, Mexico.

Research output: Contribution to conferencePosterResearch

Harvard

Gonzalez-Gutierrez, J, Cano Cano, S, Ecker, J, Arbeiter, F, Burkhardt, C, Hampel, S, Kukla, C & Holzer, C 2017, 'Special Binder Systems for Metal Powders in Highly Filled Filaments for Fused Filament Fabrication', 33rd international conference of the polymer processing society, Cancún, Mexico, 10/12/17 - 14/12/17 pp. 1.

APA

Gonzalez-Gutierrez, J., Cano Cano, S., Ecker, J., Arbeiter, F., Burkhardt, C., Hampel, S., Kukla, C., & Holzer, C. (2017). Special Binder Systems for Metal Powders in Highly Filled Filaments for Fused Filament Fabrication. 1. Poster session presented at 33rd international conference of the polymer processing society, Cancún, Mexico.

Vancouver

Gonzalez-Gutierrez J, Cano Cano S, Ecker J, Arbeiter F, Burkhardt C, Hampel S et al.. Special Binder Systems for Metal Powders in Highly Filled Filaments for Fused Filament Fabrication. 2017. Poster session presented at 33rd international conference of the polymer processing society, Cancún, Mexico.

Author

Gonzalez-Gutierrez, Joamin ; Cano Cano, Santiago ; Ecker, Josef et al. / Special Binder Systems for Metal Powders in Highly Filled Filaments for Fused Filament Fabrication. Poster session presented at 33rd international conference of the polymer processing society, Cancún, Mexico.1 p.

Bibtex - Download

@conference{e99e15ddf9524ce18c4a79e60d160bec,
title = "Special Binder Systems for Metal Powders in Highly Filled Filaments for Fused Filament Fabrication",
abstract = "Fused filament fabrication (FFF) is an extrusion-based additive manufacturing process, which is very popular for the fabrication of polymeric parts with complex geometry. FFF can be used as an economical alternative for the production of metal parts, too, by using filaments with a volume content of metal powder greater than 50 vol%. The additive manufacturing process must be followed by a debinding step and a sintering step. The addition of metal particles to matrices usually used in FFF makes the filaments brittle and non-flexible; therefore the extrusion process during FFF is hindered. In order to overcome the brittleness a special polymeric binder system had to be prepared, consisting of flexible and stiff components. With this matrix and 55 vol% of three different metal powders – stainless steel, titanium and a magnetic alloy of NdFeB – filaments were produced and their tensile properties were tested. The printing trials, performed on a conventional FFF machine, proved that all of those materials were still printable even though their tensile properties were very different. The printed parts were debound with a solvent and after sintering metallic parts were obtained. ",
keywords = "Additive Manufacturing, highly filled polymer, Fused Filament Fabrication, debinding, Sinter",
author = "Joamin Gonzalez-Gutierrez and {Cano Cano}, Santiago and Josef Ecker and Florian Arbeiter and Carlo Burkhardt and Stefan Hampel and Christian Kukla and Clemens Holzer",
year = "2017",
month = dec,
day = "14",
language = "English",
pages = "1",
note = "33rd international conference of the polymer processing society, PPS-33 ; Conference date: 10-12-2017 Through 14-12-2017",
url = "http://pps-33.com/",

}

RIS (suitable for import to EndNote) - Download

TY - CONF

T1 - Special Binder Systems for Metal Powders in Highly Filled Filaments for Fused Filament Fabrication

AU - Gonzalez-Gutierrez, Joamin

AU - Cano Cano, Santiago

AU - Ecker, Josef

AU - Arbeiter, Florian

AU - Burkhardt, Carlo

AU - Hampel, Stefan

AU - Kukla, Christian

AU - Holzer, Clemens

PY - 2017/12/14

Y1 - 2017/12/14

N2 - Fused filament fabrication (FFF) is an extrusion-based additive manufacturing process, which is very popular for the fabrication of polymeric parts with complex geometry. FFF can be used as an economical alternative for the production of metal parts, too, by using filaments with a volume content of metal powder greater than 50 vol%. The additive manufacturing process must be followed by a debinding step and a sintering step. The addition of metal particles to matrices usually used in FFF makes the filaments brittle and non-flexible; therefore the extrusion process during FFF is hindered. In order to overcome the brittleness a special polymeric binder system had to be prepared, consisting of flexible and stiff components. With this matrix and 55 vol% of three different metal powders – stainless steel, titanium and a magnetic alloy of NdFeB – filaments were produced and their tensile properties were tested. The printing trials, performed on a conventional FFF machine, proved that all of those materials were still printable even though their tensile properties were very different. The printed parts were debound with a solvent and after sintering metallic parts were obtained.

AB - Fused filament fabrication (FFF) is an extrusion-based additive manufacturing process, which is very popular for the fabrication of polymeric parts with complex geometry. FFF can be used as an economical alternative for the production of metal parts, too, by using filaments with a volume content of metal powder greater than 50 vol%. The additive manufacturing process must be followed by a debinding step and a sintering step. The addition of metal particles to matrices usually used in FFF makes the filaments brittle and non-flexible; therefore the extrusion process during FFF is hindered. In order to overcome the brittleness a special polymeric binder system had to be prepared, consisting of flexible and stiff components. With this matrix and 55 vol% of three different metal powders – stainless steel, titanium and a magnetic alloy of NdFeB – filaments were produced and their tensile properties were tested. The printing trials, performed on a conventional FFF machine, proved that all of those materials were still printable even though their tensile properties were very different. The printed parts were debound with a solvent and after sintering metallic parts were obtained.

KW - Additive Manufacturing

KW - highly filled polymer

KW - Fused Filament Fabrication

KW - debinding

KW - Sinter

M3 - Poster

SP - 1

T2 - 33rd international conference of the polymer processing society

Y2 - 10 December 2017 through 14 December 2017

ER -