Using Carbon-fibre Reinforcement with a 5-axis Material Extrusion System

  • Kaill N
  • Pradel P
  • Bingham G
  • et al.
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Abstract

One of the main limitations of material extrusion (ME) components is their anisotropic mechanical behaviour, mainly due to the poor bonding between layers. 5-axis ME has the capability to orientate theprint layers in line with loading conditions, in order to limit the effect of poor inter-laminar bonding. Previous work has demonstrated how aligning deposited material in the same direction as the dominant stresses can improve a part’s mechanical performance. When fibre-reinforcement is added to theseoriented layers, the stiffness and strength of parts should increase further. This paper presents a comparison between 5-axis parts that were printed in pure poly-lactic acid (PLA) and in carbon-fibrereinforced (CFR) PLA. Sets of dome-shaped components were built using several different build strategies and tested for compressive stiffness and strength. The results were rather mixed but did show a marked improvement in compressive strength under certain conditions. Further work is required to understand one of the failure mechanisms that was seen and to overcome some of the limitations of the 5-axis machine currently being used. The work was undertaken to support the Directional Composites through Innovative Manufacturing (DiCoMI) project, funded by the European Commission.

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APA

Kaill, N., Pradel, P., Bingham, G., & Campbell, R. I. (2019). Using Carbon-fibre Reinforcement with a 5-axis Material Extrusion System. MATEC Web of Conferences, 299, 06002. https://doi.org/10.1051/matecconf/201929906002

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