Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
10629204 | Journal of the European Ceramic Society | 2016 | 8 Pages |
Abstract
Direct ink writing, a type of additive manufacturing, has been used to fabricate near-net shaped boron carbide (B4C) specimens at room temperature with aqueous suspensions. Suspensions with B4C solids loading of 48-56 vol.% were dispersed with polyethlenimine (PEI, 25,000 and 750,000 g/mol) and exhibited yield-pseudoplastic behavior. Specimens with filament layer shape retention were produced with suspensions with 50-56 vol.% B4C and yield stressesââ¥43 Pa and equilibrium storage moduliââ¥700 Pa. No residual porosity or cracking between deposited layers was observed in any samples. However, warpage was observed in some green body specimens and was minimized through use of a low molecular weight polymer and reduction of the B4C solids loading. Optimal specimens with high filament layer shape retention and no warpage were produced with suspensions containing 54 vol.% B4C and 25k g/mol PEI.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Materials Science
Ceramics and Composites
Authors
William J. Jr., Lisa M. Rueschhoff, Andres I. Diaz-Cano, Jeffrey P. Youngblood, Rodney W. Trice,