Structural stability of Polylactide rope drums with a hybrid Gyroid-spokes infill structure, manufactured through fused filament fabrication

Research output: Contribution to journalResearch articleContributed

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Abstract

Additive manufacturing (AM) offers greater design freedom than conventional manufacturing processes. AM allows for components with complex infill structures of e. g. triply periodic-minimal surfaces (TPMS) that lead to significant weight reduction. Nevertheless, AM is mainly used in specialised engineering branches such as aerospace and medical engineering. This is due to high system cost and the high energy costs of the machines used, which utilise selective laser sintering (SLS), laser powder bed fusion (LPBF), or stereolithography (SLA). Fused filament fabrication (FFF) can offer cheaper and more energy-efficient machines. A series of tensile tests with FFF rope drum bodies made from polylactide (PLA) aims to investigate the stability of FFF machine elements. The test specimens possess a novel, hybrid infill structure comprised of straight spokes and a TPMS-gyroid surface. Compared to previous investigations, the specific breaking force – relative to the test specimens’ weight – increased by up to 159%. Whereas the infill density affects tensile strength as well as deformation, the infill distribution between the TPMS and spokes part of said hybrid structure affects especially the deformation behaviour. The results show that FFF machine elements such as the tested drum bodies have a realistic perspective for use in future products with regard to static strength.

Details

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)45–59
Number of pages15
Journal innoTRAC journal : journal of innovative traction mechanisms
Volume2
Issue number1
Publication statusPublished - 8 Dec 2022
Peer-reviewedNo

External IDs

ORCID /0000-0002-1484-7187/work/142243122
Mendeley a17cad2f-ec0f-3c07-ae13-443b8d2c6dd1

Keywords