Additive manufacturing processes have evolved considerably in the past years, growing into a wide range of products through the use of different materials depending on its application sectors. Nevertheless, the fused deposition modelling (FDM) technique has proven to be an eco-nomically feasible process turning additive manufacture technologies from consumer production into a mainstream manufacturing technique. Current advances in the finite element method (FEM) and the computer-aided engineering (CAE) technology are unable to study three-dimensional (3D) printed models, since the final result is highly dependent on processing and environment parame-ters. Because of that, an in-depth understanding of the printed geometrical mesostructure is needed to extend FEM applications. This study aims to generate a homogeneous structural element that accurately represents the behavior of FDM-processed materials, by means of a representative volume element (RVE). The homogenization summarizes the main mechanical characteristics of the actual 3D printed structure, opening new analysis and optimization procedures. Moreover, the linear RVE results can be used to further analyze the in-deep behavior of the FDM unit cell. Therefore, industries could perform a feasible engineering analysis of the final printed elements, allowing the FDM technology to become a mainstream, low-cost manufacturing process in the near future.

Ferretti P., Santi G.M., Leon Cardenas C., Fusari E., Donnici G., Frizziero L. (2021). Representative volume element (Rve) analysis for mechanical characterization of fused deposition modeled components. POLYMERS, 13(20), 1-18 [10.3390/polym13203555].

Representative volume element (Rve) analysis for mechanical characterization of fused deposition modeled components

Ferretti P.;Santi G. M.;Leon Cardenas C.;Fusari E.;Donnici G.;Frizziero L.
2021

Abstract

Additive manufacturing processes have evolved considerably in the past years, growing into a wide range of products through the use of different materials depending on its application sectors. Nevertheless, the fused deposition modelling (FDM) technique has proven to be an eco-nomically feasible process turning additive manufacture technologies from consumer production into a mainstream manufacturing technique. Current advances in the finite element method (FEM) and the computer-aided engineering (CAE) technology are unable to study three-dimensional (3D) printed models, since the final result is highly dependent on processing and environment parame-ters. Because of that, an in-depth understanding of the printed geometrical mesostructure is needed to extend FEM applications. This study aims to generate a homogeneous structural element that accurately represents the behavior of FDM-processed materials, by means of a representative volume element (RVE). The homogenization summarizes the main mechanical characteristics of the actual 3D printed structure, opening new analysis and optimization procedures. Moreover, the linear RVE results can be used to further analyze the in-deep behavior of the FDM unit cell. Therefore, industries could perform a feasible engineering analysis of the final printed elements, allowing the FDM technology to become a mainstream, low-cost manufacturing process in the near future.
2021
Ferretti P., Santi G.M., Leon Cardenas C., Fusari E., Donnici G., Frizziero L. (2021). Representative volume element (Rve) analysis for mechanical characterization of fused deposition modeled components. POLYMERS, 13(20), 1-18 [10.3390/polym13203555].
Ferretti P.; Santi G.M.; Leon Cardenas C.; Fusari E.; Donnici G.; Frizziero L.
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11585/847063
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