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Additively manufactured foamed polylactic acid for lightweight structures

Armin Yousefi Kanani (Mechanical Engineering Group, School of Engineering, University of Kent, Canterbury, UK and Department of Engineering, Engineering Building, Lancaster University, Lancaster, UK)
Allan E.W. Rennie (Department of Engineering, Engineering Building, Lancaster University, Lancaster, UK)
Shayfull Zamree Bin Abd Rahim (Green Design & Manufacture Research Group, Center of Excellence Geopolymer and Green Technology (CEGeoGTech), Universiti Malaysia Perlis, Arau, Malaysia and Faculty of Mechanical Engineering Technology, Universiti Malaysia Perlis, Arau, Malaysia)

Rapid Prototyping Journal

ISSN: 1355-2546

Article publication date: 5 July 2022

Issue publication date: 2 January 2023

281

Abstract

Purpose

This study aims to make foamed polylactic acid (PLA) structures with different densities by varying deposition temperatures using the material extrusion (MEX) additive manufacturing process.

Design/methodology/approach

The extrusion multiplier (EM) was calibrated for each deposition temperature to control foaming expansion. Material density was determined using extruded cubes with the optimal EM value for each deposition temperature. The influence of deposition temperature on the tensile, compression and flexure characteristics of the foamable filament was studied experimentally.

Findings

The foaming expansion ratio, the consistency of the raster width and the raster gap significantly affect the surface roughness of the printed samples. Regardless of the loading conditions, the maximum stiffness and yield strength were achieved at a deposition temperature of 200°C when the PLA specimens had no foam. When the maximum foaming occurred (220°C deposition temperature), the stiffness and yield strength of the PLA specimens were significantly reduced.

Practical implications

The obvious benefit of using foamed materials is that they are lighter and consume less material than bulky polymers. Injection or compression moulding is the most commonly used method for creating foamed products. However, these technologies require tooling to fabricate complicated parts, which may be costly and time-consuming. Conversely, the MEX process can produce extremely complex parts with less tooling expense, reduction in energy use and optimised material consumption.

Originality/value

This study investigates the possibility of stiff, lightweight structures with low fractions of interconnected porosity using foamable filament.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

Credit authorship contribution statement: Armin Yousefi Kanani: conceptualisation, methodology, experimental test, writing – original draft. Allan Edward Watson Rennie: conceptualisation, writing – review and editing. Shayfull Zamree Bin Abd Rahim: review and editing.

This work is financially supported by the European Regional Development Fund through the Greater Innovation for Smart Materials Optimisation (GISMO) Project (Grant Reference: 03R18P02671).

Declaration of competing interest: The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have influenced the work reported in this paper.

Citation

Yousefi Kanani, A., Rennie, A.E.W. and Abd Rahim, S.Z.B. (2023), "Additively manufactured foamed polylactic acid for lightweight structures", Rapid Prototyping Journal, Vol. 29 No. 1, pp. 50-66. https://doi.org/10.1108/RPJ-03-2022-0100

Publisher

:

Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2022, Emerald Publishing Limited

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