Highlights: What are the main findings? Gyroid PLA–flax TPMS sandwiches printed via FFF were characterized in terms of flexure and compression. Flexural behavior was skin-dominated, with best strength at 0.28 mm/200 °C, and ANOVA confirmed the significant effects of temperature and layer height. Compressive behavior was core-dominated, showing cellular collapse with first-collapse stresses of 6.3–8.2 MPa, significantly governed by temperature and layer height (ANOVA). Layer height strongly influenced printing time/energy/CO2, with 0.28 mm providing the best kWh·MPa−1 efficiency. What are the implications of the main findings? Identifies process windows for optimizing TPMS sandwiches under multi-axial loading (skin vs. core-dominated regimes). Supports sustainable, energy-efficient manufacturing of bio-based lightweight components. Triply periodic minimal surface (TPMS) sandwich structures made from PLA, reinforced with flax fibers, offer a bio-based approach to lightweight design, but their performance is sensitive to material-extrusion parameters. This study investigates the combined effects of layer height (0.16, 0.24, and 0.28 mm) and extrusion temperature (200, 220 °C) on the flexural behavior of gyroid-core PLA–flax sandwiches. Six parameter combinations were fabricated by fused filament fabrication and tested in three-point bending to obtain flexural strength and strain at failure. Post-fracture optical microscopy related mesostructure and failure mechanisms to macroscopic response. The highest strength (≈23 MPa) was found at 0.28 mm/200 °C, while the greatest strain at failure (≈0.06 mm/mm) occurred at 0.16 mm/200 °C. Two-factor ANOVA showed the significant main and interaction effects of temperature and layer height on both metrics. Fractography revealed a transition from interfacial delamination at lower temperatures and thinner layers to a more localized, cohesive rupture as interlayer bonding improved with higher temperature and thicker layers. Complementary compression tests revealed a core-dominated cellular collapse, with first-collapse stresses ranging from 6.3 to 8.2 MPa and a significant dependence on layer height and temperature (ANOVA). A gate-to-gate sustainability assessment indicated that layer height dominates printing time, energy demand, and CO2 emissions, with 0.28 mm minimizing energy per unit property. Measured part masses were 4–6% below slicer predictions, consistent with typical FFF porosity. The results provide TPMS-specific process windows that balance mechanical performance and energy efficiency for PLA–flax sandwiches.
Influence of Layer Thickness and Extrusion Temperature on the Mechanical Behavior of PLA–Flax TPMS Sandwich Structures Fabricated via Fused Filament Fabrication
Marabello, Gabriele;Chairi, Mohamed;Parisi, Mariasofia;Di Bella, Guido
2025-01-01
Abstract
Highlights: What are the main findings? Gyroid PLA–flax TPMS sandwiches printed via FFF were characterized in terms of flexure and compression. Flexural behavior was skin-dominated, with best strength at 0.28 mm/200 °C, and ANOVA confirmed the significant effects of temperature and layer height. Compressive behavior was core-dominated, showing cellular collapse with first-collapse stresses of 6.3–8.2 MPa, significantly governed by temperature and layer height (ANOVA). Layer height strongly influenced printing time/energy/CO2, with 0.28 mm providing the best kWh·MPa−1 efficiency. What are the implications of the main findings? Identifies process windows for optimizing TPMS sandwiches under multi-axial loading (skin vs. core-dominated regimes). Supports sustainable, energy-efficient manufacturing of bio-based lightweight components. Triply periodic minimal surface (TPMS) sandwich structures made from PLA, reinforced with flax fibers, offer a bio-based approach to lightweight design, but their performance is sensitive to material-extrusion parameters. This study investigates the combined effects of layer height (0.16, 0.24, and 0.28 mm) and extrusion temperature (200, 220 °C) on the flexural behavior of gyroid-core PLA–flax sandwiches. Six parameter combinations were fabricated by fused filament fabrication and tested in three-point bending to obtain flexural strength and strain at failure. Post-fracture optical microscopy related mesostructure and failure mechanisms to macroscopic response. The highest strength (≈23 MPa) was found at 0.28 mm/200 °C, while the greatest strain at failure (≈0.06 mm/mm) occurred at 0.16 mm/200 °C. Two-factor ANOVA showed the significant main and interaction effects of temperature and layer height on both metrics. Fractography revealed a transition from interfacial delamination at lower temperatures and thinner layers to a more localized, cohesive rupture as interlayer bonding improved with higher temperature and thicker layers. Complementary compression tests revealed a core-dominated cellular collapse, with first-collapse stresses ranging from 6.3 to 8.2 MPa and a significant dependence on layer height and temperature (ANOVA). A gate-to-gate sustainability assessment indicated that layer height dominates printing time, energy demand, and CO2 emissions, with 0.28 mm minimizing energy per unit property. Measured part masses were 4–6% below slicer predictions, consistent with typical FFF porosity. The results provide TPMS-specific process windows that balance mechanical performance and energy efficiency for PLA–flax sandwiches.Pubblicazioni consigliate
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