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HERO ID
4727735
Reference Type
Journal Article
Title
Experimental characterization of the mechanical properties of 3D-printed ABS and polycarbonate parts
Author(s)
Cantrell, JT; Rohde, S; Damiani, D; Gurnani, R; Disandro, L; Anton, J; Young, A; Jerez, A; Steinbach, D; Kroese, C; Ifju, PG
Year
2017
Is Peer Reviewed?
1
Journal
Rapid Prototyping Journal
ISSN:
1355-2546
EISSN:
1758-7670
Publisher
SPRINGER
Location
NEW YORK
Book Title
Conference Proceedings of the Society for Experimental Mechanics Series
Volume
23
Issue
4
Page Numbers
811-824
Language
English
DOI
10.1108/RPJ-03-2016-0042
Web of Science Id
WOS:000407543400016
URL
https://www.emeraldinsight.com/doi/pdfplus/10.1108/RPJ-03-2016-0042
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Relationship(s)
is also published as
4706779
Experimental characterization of the mechanical properties of 3D printed ABS and polycarbonate parts
Abstract
Purpose - This paper aims to present the methodology and results of the experimental characterization of three-dimensional (3D) printed acrylonitrile butadiene styrene (ABS) and polycarbonate (PC) parts utilizing digital image correlation (DIC).
Design/methodology/approach - Tensile and shear characterizations of ABS and PC 3D-printed parts were performed to determine the extent of anisotropy present in 3D-printed materials. Specimens were printed with varying raster ([+45/-45], [+30/-60], [+15/-75] and [0/90]) and build orientations (flat, on-edge and up-right) to determine the directional properties of the materials. Tensile and Iosipescu shear specimens were printed and loaded in a universal testing machine utilizing two-dimensional (2D) DIC to measure strain. The Poisson's ratio, Young's modulus, offset yield strength, tensile strength at yield, elongation at break, tensile stress at break and strain energy density were gathered for each tensile orientation combination. Shear modulus, offset yield strength and shear strength at yield values were collected for each shear combination.
Findings - Results indicated that raster and build orientations had negligible effects on the Young's modulus or Poisson's ratio in ABS tensile specimens. Shear modulus and shear offset yield strength varied by up to 33 per cent in ABS specimens, signifying that tensile properties are not indicative of shear properties. Raster orientation in the flat build samples reveals anisotropic behavior in PC specimens as the moduli and strengths varied by up to 20 per cent. Similar variations were observed in shear for PC. Changing the build orientation of PC specimens appeared to reveal a similar magnitude of variation in material properties.
Originality/value - This article tests tensile and shear specimens utilizing DIC, which has not been employed previously with 3D-printed specimens. The extensive shear testing conducted in this paper has not been previously attempted, and the results indicate the need for shear testing to understand the 3D-printed material behavior fully.
Keywords
Anisotropy; Mechanical properties of materials; Polycarbonate; 3D-printing; Digital image correlation; ABS
Editor(s)
Yoshida, S; Lamberti, L; Sciammarella, C;
ISBN
978-3-319-41599-4
Conference Name
SEM Annual Conference and Exposition on Experimental and Applied Mechanics
Conference Location
Orlando, FL
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