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Polylactide/Carbon Black Segregated Composites for 3D Printing of Conductive Products

One of the most important directions in the development of additive manufacturing or three-dimensional (3D) printing technologies is the creation of functional materials, which allow not only prototyping but also the manufacturing of products with functional properties. In this paper, poly-lactide a...

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Autores principales: Masiuchok, Olha, Iurzhenko, Maksym, Kolisnyk, Roman, Mamunya, Yevgen, Godzierz, Marcin, Demchenko, Valeriy, Yermolenko, Dmytro, Shadrin, Andriy
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9573264/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36235970
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/polym14194022
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author Masiuchok, Olha
Iurzhenko, Maksym
Kolisnyk, Roman
Mamunya, Yevgen
Godzierz, Marcin
Demchenko, Valeriy
Yermolenko, Dmytro
Shadrin, Andriy
author_facet Masiuchok, Olha
Iurzhenko, Maksym
Kolisnyk, Roman
Mamunya, Yevgen
Godzierz, Marcin
Demchenko, Valeriy
Yermolenko, Dmytro
Shadrin, Andriy
author_sort Masiuchok, Olha
collection PubMed
description One of the most important directions in the development of additive manufacturing or three-dimensional (3D) printing technologies is the creation of functional materials, which allow not only prototyping but also the manufacturing of products with functional properties. In this paper, poly-lactide acid (PLA) /carbon black (CB) composites with segregated (ordered) structure have been created. Computer simulation based on the Mamunya geometrical model showed that the CB content within φ = 2.5–5 vol.% in the polylactide matrix leads to the formation of a continuous electrically conductive phase with an increase of electrical conductivity σ(dc) above the percolation threshold. The simulation results were experimentally confirmed by optical microscopy and studies of the electrical conductivity of the composites. It was found that increasing CB content from φ = 1 vol.% to φ = 7 vol.% in the composites causes insignificant (due to the segregated structure) phase changes in the polylactide matrix and improves the thermal properties of composites. Electrically conductive filaments for Fused Deposition 3D Printing (FDM) were developed from PLA/CB composites and then 3D printed. A correlation between the electrical conductivity σ(dc) and the CB content φ for base composites, filaments produced from them, and final 3D samples, has been found. Conductivity varies within σ(dc) = 3.1·10(−11) − 10·10(−3) S/cm for the filaments and σ(dc) = 3.6·10(−11) − 8.1·10(−4) S/cm for the final 3D-products.
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spelling pubmed-95732642022-10-17 Polylactide/Carbon Black Segregated Composites for 3D Printing of Conductive Products Masiuchok, Olha Iurzhenko, Maksym Kolisnyk, Roman Mamunya, Yevgen Godzierz, Marcin Demchenko, Valeriy Yermolenko, Dmytro Shadrin, Andriy Polymers (Basel) Article One of the most important directions in the development of additive manufacturing or three-dimensional (3D) printing technologies is the creation of functional materials, which allow not only prototyping but also the manufacturing of products with functional properties. In this paper, poly-lactide acid (PLA) /carbon black (CB) composites with segregated (ordered) structure have been created. Computer simulation based on the Mamunya geometrical model showed that the CB content within φ = 2.5–5 vol.% in the polylactide matrix leads to the formation of a continuous electrically conductive phase with an increase of electrical conductivity σ(dc) above the percolation threshold. The simulation results were experimentally confirmed by optical microscopy and studies of the electrical conductivity of the composites. It was found that increasing CB content from φ = 1 vol.% to φ = 7 vol.% in the composites causes insignificant (due to the segregated structure) phase changes in the polylactide matrix and improves the thermal properties of composites. Electrically conductive filaments for Fused Deposition 3D Printing (FDM) were developed from PLA/CB composites and then 3D printed. A correlation between the electrical conductivity σ(dc) and the CB content φ for base composites, filaments produced from them, and final 3D samples, has been found. Conductivity varies within σ(dc) = 3.1·10(−11) − 10·10(−3) S/cm for the filaments and σ(dc) = 3.6·10(−11) − 8.1·10(−4) S/cm for the final 3D-products. MDPI 2022-09-26 /pmc/articles/PMC9573264/ /pubmed/36235970 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/polym14194022 Text en © 2022 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Masiuchok, Olha
Iurzhenko, Maksym
Kolisnyk, Roman
Mamunya, Yevgen
Godzierz, Marcin
Demchenko, Valeriy
Yermolenko, Dmytro
Shadrin, Andriy
Polylactide/Carbon Black Segregated Composites for 3D Printing of Conductive Products
title Polylactide/Carbon Black Segregated Composites for 3D Printing of Conductive Products
title_full Polylactide/Carbon Black Segregated Composites for 3D Printing of Conductive Products
title_fullStr Polylactide/Carbon Black Segregated Composites for 3D Printing of Conductive Products
title_full_unstemmed Polylactide/Carbon Black Segregated Composites for 3D Printing of Conductive Products
title_short Polylactide/Carbon Black Segregated Composites for 3D Printing of Conductive Products
title_sort polylactide/carbon black segregated composites for 3d printing of conductive products
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9573264/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36235970
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/polym14194022
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