Polymers (Jul 2022)

Investigation of Low-Cost FDM-Printed Polymers for Elevated-Temperature Applications

  • Jan Lukas Storck,
  • Guido Ehrmann,
  • Uwe Güth,
  • Jana Uthoff,
  • Sarah Vanessa Homburg,
  • Tomasz Blachowicz,
  • Andrea Ehrmann

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/polym14142826
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 14
p. 2826

Abstract

Read online

While fused deposition modeling (FDM) and other relatively inexpensive 3D printing methods are nowadays used in many applications, the possible areas of using FDM-printed objects are still limited due to mechanical and thermal constraints. Applications for space, e.g., for microsatellites, are restricted by the usually insufficient heat resistance of the typical FDM printing materials. Printing high-temperature polymers, on the other hand, necessitates special FDM printers, which are not always available. Here, we show investigations of common polymers, processible on low-cost FDM printers, under elevated temperatures of up to 160 °C for single treatments. The polymers with the highest dimensional stability and mechanical properties after different temperature treatments were periodically heat-treated between -40 °C and +80 °C in cycles of 90 min, similar to the temperature cycles a microsatellite in the low Earth orbit (LEO) experiences. While none of the materials under investigation fully maintains its dimensions and mechanical properties, filled poly(lactic acid) (PLA) filaments were found most suitable for applications under these thermal conditions.

Keywords