3D Printing of High Viscosity Reinforced Silicone Elastomers

Recent advances in additive manufacturing, specifically direct ink writing (DIW) and ink-jetting, have enabled the production of elastomeric silicone parts with deterministic control over the structure, shape, and mechanical properties. These new technologies offer rapid prototyping advantages and f...

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Published inPolymers Vol. 13; no. 14; p. 2239
Main Authors Rodriguez, Nicholas, Ruelas, Samantha, Forien, Jean-Baptiste, Dudukovic, Nikola, DeOtte, Josh, Rodriguez, Jennifer, Moran, Bryan, Lewicki, James P., Duoss, Eric B., Oakdale, James S.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Basel MDPI AG 08.07.2021
MDPI
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Summary:Recent advances in additive manufacturing, specifically direct ink writing (DIW) and ink-jetting, have enabled the production of elastomeric silicone parts with deterministic control over the structure, shape, and mechanical properties. These new technologies offer rapid prototyping advantages and find applications in various fields, including biomedical devices, prosthetics, metamaterials, and soft robotics. Stereolithography (SLA) is a complementary approach with the ability to print with finer features and potentially higher throughput. However, all high-performance silicone elastomers are composites of polysiloxane networks reinforced with particulate filler, and consequently, silicone resins tend to have high viscosities (gel- or paste-like), which complicates or completely inhibits the layer-by-layer recoating process central to most SLA technologies. Herein, the design and build of a digital light projection SLA printer suitable for handling high-viscosity resins is demonstrated. Further, a series of UV-curable silicone resins with thiol-ene crosslinking and reinforced by a combination of fumed silica and MQ resins are also described. The resulting silicone elastomers are shown to have tunable mechanical properties, with 100–350% elongation and ultimate tensile strength from 1 to 2.5 MPa. Three-dimensional printed features of 0.4 mm were achieved, and complexity is demonstrated by octet-truss lattices that display negative stiffness.
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19-FS-049
USDOE
N.R. and S.R. contributed equally.
ISSN:2073-4360
2073-4360
DOI:10.3390/polym13142239