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Active mixing of two-component viscoelastic silicone ink at molecular level for spatiotemporally controlled 3D/4D printing of cellular silicones.

Authors :
Liao, Enze
Zhang, Yaling
Su, Yu
Zhang, Chenyang
Geng, Chengzhen
Li, Changlin
Liu, Xiaoyan
Liu, Yu
Lu, Ai
Source :
Polymer. May2024, Vol. 302, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

3D printed silicones have demonstrated great potential in diverse areas such as soft robots, tissue engineering, flexible sensors and energy dissipation. However, most silicone inks face inevitable curing issue once it is prepared. During the materials extrusion based printing process, the curing-related viscosity change in silicone inks hamper the ink stability and printing controllability, leading to complex relationship among ink properties and printing parameters, as well as printing structures and material properties of final products. Herein, this work presents active mixing of two component silicone ink to realize stable printing, achieving exact and continuous match of ink properties and printing parameters. Using a specially formulated ink containing separate starting components with reactive groups, catalyst and thixotropic agents, this work studies the active mixing process thoroughly for the first time from molecular level to materials performances under various conditions regarding inlet flow rates, impeller rotation speed and component ratios. Besides, cellular silicones with controlled distribution of component ratios and tailored gradient structures are printed, leading to integrated manufacturing of compression performance and shape morphing property. This work will pave way for active mixing and printing of two-component silicones, and provide guidance for other reactive multi-material 3D printing systems. Active mixing of two-component viscoelastic silicone inks is studied, to solve the inevitable curing issue of mixture silicone ink, and to improve printing stability for continuous 3D printing of cellular silicones. Under optimal parameters, good mixing effects are achieved, from molecular distribution to mechanical performances. Furthermore, printed cellular silicones with tunable gradient compositions show adjustable compression and shape-morphing properties. [Display omitted] • Active mixing of two-component viscoelastic silicone inks is studied to improve printing stability for DIW printing of cellular silicones. • Under optimal parameters, good mixing effects are achieved, from molecular distribution to mechanical performances. • Printed cellular silicones with tunable gradient compositions show adjustable compression and shape-morphing properties. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00323861
Volume :
302
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Polymer
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
177064072
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.polymer.2024.127053