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1.
《Ceramics International》2022,48(11):15218-15226
We prepare bimodal particle size photo-curable ceramic pastes with high solid loadings (up to 65 vol %) and fabricate porous alumina ceramic cores with complex shapes via ceramic stereolithography (Cer-SLA) 3D printing technique. The sintering temperature is carefully selected, ranging from 1500 °C to 1650 °C, and a high holding time (>4 h) is applied to guarantee that the materials can withstand the subsequent high temperature (>1500 °C) casting process for single-crystal nickel-based superalloy hollow turbine blades. Herein, the originally spherical fine particles are found to become platelet-like after sintering, and the forming mechanism is discussed in detail. In addition, we explore the influence of platelet-like particles, coarse particles and sintering process on the microstructural evolution of alumina particles, and reveal the relationship between microstructure and properties of ceramic cores. These results illustrate that the proposed materials for SLA 3D printing exhibit a great potential in the fabrication of complex-shaped alumina ceramic cores for high-precision investment casting, e.g., manufacturing single-crystal nickel-based superalloy hollow turbine blades for an advanced aircraft engine.  相似文献   

2.
Ceramic core is an essential component in the precise casting of hollow turbine blades, and the investigation on 3D printing of silica-based ceramic cores is crucial to the development of aviation industry; however, they are suffered from difficulty in high-temperature strength and structural anisotropy. In present work, silica-based ceramic cores were prepared via DLP stereolithography 3D printing, and the anisotropy management on microstructures and properties were explored based on the particle size of fused silica powders. In 3D printed ceramic cores with coarse powders, significant anisotropy was displayed exhibiting multilayer structure with large gaps in horizontal printing and uniform porous microstructure in the vertical direction, which was further explained by the particle deposition in printing. With finer silica powders, the uniformity in the microstructures was highly improved, attributed to the enhanced particle dispersion in ceramic slurries and promoted interlayer particle rearrangement during sintering. To evaluate the anisotropy in mechanical property, the ratio of vertical strength to horizontal strength (σVH) was proposed, which rose from 0.48 to 0.86 as the particle size decreased from 35 µm to 5 µm, suggesting enhanced mechanical uniformity. While the average particle size of silica powders was 5 µm, the flexure strengths of ceramic cores in different directions were up to 18.5 MPa and 16.3 MPa at 1540 °C with σVH ratio of 0.88, which well satisfied the demands for the casting of turbine blades. This work inspires new guidance on the anisotropy management in ceramic cores prepared by 3D printing, and provides new technology for fabrication of silica-based ceramic cores with superior high temperature mechanical properties.  相似文献   

3.
《Ceramics International》2023,49(15):24861-24867
Ceramic cores are key components to form inner hollow structures in aero-engine blades, and 3D printing is an ideal molding technology for ceramic cores. In this work, silica-based ceramic cores are fabricate via 3D printing of digital light processing (DLP) stereolithography, and the anisotropy in microstructure and property are controlled by aluminum powders. The ceramic cores without aluminum powders exhibit anisotropic microstructure with interlayer gaps, which get narrower and disappear with doping of 7.5–10 wt% of aluminum powders, due to the volume expansion during oxidization reaction of aluminum powders filling the interlayer gaps. The anisotropy in mechanical property is rely on the printing direction, and the ratio of strength in different directions (σVH) is put forward to value the mechanical anisotropy; the ratios rise from 0.40 to 0.92 at room temperature and 0.51 to 0.97 at 1540 °C, as 7.5 wt% of aluminum is doped, and the optimized ceramic cores show high-temperature strengths of 16.6 MPa and 16.1 MPa in different printing directions. Even though ceramic cores with 10 wt% of aluminum show uniform microstructure and higher σVH ratio, the weak particle bonding within printing layers limits their mechanical property, and the strengths decrease to 13.8 MPa and 13.4 MPa at 1540 °C. This work inspires a new technique to excellent high-temperature mechanical properties with anisotropy control in 3D printing of ceramic cores.  相似文献   

4.
《Ceramics International》2022,48(20):30282-30293
Ceramic cores are an important component in the preparation of hollow turbine blades for aero-engines. Compared with traditional hot injection technology, 3D printing technology overcomes the disadvantages of a long production cycle and the difficulty in producing highly complex ceramic cores. The ceramic cores of hollow turbine blades require a high bending strength at high temperatures, and nano-mineralizers greatly improve their strength. In this study, nano-silica-reinforced alumina-based ceramic cores were prepared, and the effects of nanopowder content on the microstructure and properties of the ceramic cores were investigated. Alumina-based ceramic cores contained with nano-silica were prepared using the vat photopolymerization 3D printing technique and sintered at 1500 °C. The results showed that the linear shrinkage of ceramic cores first increased and then decreased as the nano-silica powder content increased, and the bending strength showed the same trend. The fracture mode changed from intergranular to transgranular. The open porosity and bulk density fluctuated slightly. The weight loss rate was approximately 20%. When the nano-silica content was 3%, the bending strength reached a maximum of 46.2 MPa and 26.1 MPa at 25 °C and 1500 °C, respectively. The precipitation of the glass phase, change in the fracture mode of the material, pinning crack of nanoparticles, and reduction of fracture energy due to the interlocking of cracks, were the main reasons for material strengthening. The successful preparation of 3D printed nano-silica reinforced alumina-based ceramic cores is expected to promote the preparation of high-performance ceramic cores with complex structures of hollow turbine blades.  相似文献   

5.
A ceramic core is the key component in the manufacture of the hollow turbine blades of aeroengines. Compared with the traditional injection molding method, 3D printing is more suitable for manufacturing ceramic cores with a complex geometry at high precision. However, the stair-stepping effect is inevitable in the 3D printing process and affects the surface roughness and strength of the ceramic core. In this study, to explore the influence of nano-silica content on the microstructure and properties of the ceramic core, silicon-based ceramic cores were fabricated with the addition of nano-silica powder by digital light processing and subsequent sintering at 1200 °C. The results showed that the apparent porosity and pore size of the ceramic core gradually decreased as both the nano-silica powder content and bulk density increased. Meanwhile, the printing interlayer spacing was significantly reduced, resulting in a low surface roughness, high flexural strength, and creep-resistance. To simulate the entire casting process of a superalloy blade, the thermal deformation behavior of the ceramic core was observed by heating and cooling cycles performed in a thermal dilatometer at 1540 °C. The total linear shrinkage decreased as the nano-silica powder content increased, which was mainly due to the phase transformation of cristobalite and the densification of the ceramic core sintered at 1200 °C. The low surface roughness and linear shrinkage as well as high flexural strength of the ceramic core can contribute to the excellent quality of cast superalloy blades.  相似文献   

6.
Enhancing inlet gas temperature in aero/gas turbines to reduce their carbon-footprint, has led to a strive for better performing inlet cooling mechanism of the turbine blades. The internal cooling of the blades is made by ceramic cores in their casting process, but conventional ceramic molding has long reached its maximum possible geometrical complexity, hence shedding light on 3D printing of these cores. The objective of this study is to develop low-viscous, fully stabilized, commercially viable ink for vat-photopolymerization of silica-based ceramics. This paper investigates the best dispersion type and amount for different formulated monomer mixtures, and explains the best correlation between viscosity, solid loading, binders, dispersants, peeling forces and mechanical properties, and offers an optimized mixture to avoid the common ceramic printing issue, namely crack propagation of cores during sintering. Among five dispersant agents, the SOL20, SOL24 and FA4611 exhibited better performance than other dispersion agents, and the optimum concentration level for each binder and dispersant agent was ensured through sedimentation test. Their dispersion capability and long-term stability were further investigated to designate the best dispersion agent for each binder system. Further verification was made by sedimentation study of the samples at 40 °C for 40 days and reducing the superficial area of the used powder mixture. According to the result of the rheology analysis, the best dispersions were achieved using SOL20 for the loaded binder mixtures of M1 and M4, SOL24 for M3and FA4611 for M2. The instability of M1 and M2 with their respective dispersant agent was coordinated through the thixotropic agent of TX/2, and complete stabilization and near-Newtonian behavior were achieved. However, the research showed that the addition of TX/2 to fully stabilized M4 and M2 suspensions negatively impacts the mixtures’ rheological behavior from near-Newtonian to shear-thickening. In the final stage of this study, peeling forces, sintering and three-point bending tests were conducted to determine the final formulated suspension to print ceramic core components. M4 and SOL20 combination was selected for SiO2-ZrSiO4 loading and dispersing, respectively. The impact of solid loading between the range of 58 and 65 vol% on the rheological behavior of the final suspension and the mechanical properties of sintered bodies were investigated to assign an optimum solid rate. The adequate strength on sintered and degree of viscosity for ceramic vat-polymerization processing was achieved at 58 vol%. Lastly, a validation study is conducted by printing a complex ceramic core model by a commercial LCD hobby printer. This validation shows the significance of this study to scale up the manufacturing of complex-shaped ceramic cores and to revolutionize the sector, by printing inexpensive and readily available irregular-shaped (non-atomized) ceramic powder, using the most cost-effective LCD printers (non-specialized expensive ceramic printers).  相似文献   

7.
《Ceramics International》2022,48(15):21110-21117
Silica-based ceramic core is an extremely critical component in the manufacture of hollow blades during investment casting. However, the traditional preparation methods rely more on the molds, and the manufacturing costs are relatively high. In this study, silica-based ceramics with silicon hexaboride (SiB6) addition were prepared via 3D stereolithography printing. And the effects of the SiB6 content on mechanical properties of the obtained ceramic samples were explored. As the SiB6 content increased to 2.0 wt%, the linear shrinkage gradually decreased, while the room temperature and high temperature flexural strength were enhanced at the SiB6 content from 0 to 1.0 wt% and reduced as the SiB6 content further rose. As the SiB6 content increased to 1.0 wt%, the linear shrinkage was reduced to 1.86% resulting from the oxidation reaction of SiB6. Furthermore, with 1.0 wt% SiB6 addition, the flexural strength of the samples at room temperature was enhanced from 6.75 MPa to 14.63 MPa due to the sintering promotion of oxidation product B2O3, and the flexural strength at 1550 °C was improved from 7.68 MPa to 13.08 MPa because of the enhanced β-cristobalite content, which is suitable for high temperature casting of ceramic cores. Therefore, it demonstrates the capability of fabricating SiB6 reinforced silica-based ceramic cores with high performance via stereolithography.  相似文献   

8.
《Ceramics International》2021,47(19):27453-27461
Silica-based ceramic cores are widely used in the manufacturing of hollow, nickel-based, superalloy turbine blades. However, elemental Hf, Ti, Al, and other active metals in the superalloy can react with silica-based ceramic cores during casting, resulting in a reduction in the quality of the turbine blades. In this study, both plasma spraying and sol-gel dipping methods were used to prepare alumina coatings on silica-based ceramic substrates to prevent the interfacial reaction. The performance of the alumina coatings prepared by both methods was evaluated by comparative analysis of the surface roughness, bonding interface morphologies, and the adhesive characteristics of the coating. The plasma-sprayed alumina coating has a roughness greater than 5 μm and peeled away from the substrate due to the difference in thermal expansion between SiO2 and Al2O3 at temperatures above 1500 °C, rendering the silica-based substrate with the plasma-sprayed alumina coating unfit for the application requirements of the casting process. The alumina coating prepared by the sol-gel dipping method improved the roughness of the substrate from Ra 2.39 μm to Ra 1.83 μm, and no peeling was observed when heated to 1550 °C for 30 min due to the pinning characteristics of the coating on the substrate. Furthermore, the interfacial reaction between the DZ125 superalloy melt and the silica-based substrate coated with alumina by sol-gel dipping method were investigated. The alumina coating effectively inhibited the interfacial reaction and no reaction products were detected during the directional solidification with pouring temperature of 1550 °C and withdraw rate of 5 mm/min. While a uniform, 4–5 μm thick HfO2 reaction layer formed between the uncoated substrate and the DZ125 alloy melt. Two dipping-drying cycles were required to ensure the alumina sol completely covered the surface of the substrate.  相似文献   

9.
Ceramic cores based on alumina and silica are important in the manufacturing of hollow blades. However, obtaining good properties and precision is still challenging. In this research, alumina-based ceramics cores were obtained by 3D printing technology, and the effects of silica contents on the mechanical properties of the as-obtained alumina ceramic cores were evaluated. The results showed significant improvements in flexural strengths of the ceramics from 13.3 MPa to 46.3 MPa at silica contents from 0 wt% to 30 wt% due to formation of mullite phase (Al6Si2O13). By contrast, the flexural strengths declined as silica content further increased due to the generation of massive liquid phase. Also, porous structures and cracks were observed by scanning electron microscopy due to the removal of cured photosensitive resin and the mullitization reaction between alumina and silica, respectively. The manufacturing process of hollow blades required ceramic cores with flexural strengths greater than 20 MPa to resist the strike of metal liquid, as well as open porosity above 20 % to provide space for alkali liquor to dissolve the ceramic cores. As a result, 10 wt% silica was determined as the optimal value to yield ceramics with improved properties in terms of flexural strength (35.6 MPa) and open porosity (47.5 %), thereby satisfy the application requirement for the fabrication of ceramic cores.  相似文献   

10.
《Ceramics International》2023,49(19):31378-31384
In the investment casting of turbine blades, ceramic cores are key components to form complex hollow structures. Superior mechanical property and leaching rate are demanded for ceramic cores. Herein, ceramic cores were fabricated using fused silica powders as the matrix, and amorphous and polycrystalline mullite fibers as the reinforcement phases, respectively. The microstructure and property evolution of ceramic cores rely on the crystallization degree of mullite fibers are explored. Both of the mullite fibers lead to improved crystallization of cristobalite, reduced sintering shrinkage, increased apparent porosity, and benefited bending strength, creep resistance, and leaching rate of the cores. Compared to the polycrystalline mullite fibers, the amorphous fibers are metastable with large quantities of structural defects, promoting the diffusion mass transfer and forming strong interface between fibers and matrix. Therefore, the amorphous fibers have larger promotion on the bending strength and resistance to creep deformation of ceramic cores. Moreover, the structural defects of amorphous fibers ensures the high chemical activity in alkaline solutions and exhibits excellent leaching rate. The ceramic core with 4.5 wt% of amorphous mullite fibers exhibits excellent comprehensive performance with bending strengths of 28.9 MPa and 23.8 MPa at room temperature and 1550 °C, creep deformation of 0.3 mm, and leaching rate of 1.4 g/min, well meeting the casting requirements of hollow blades.  相似文献   

11.
Herein, alumina green bodies are fabricated by three dimensional (3D) printing technology, then, the influence of debinding holding time under vacuum and argon on mechanical properties is systematically investigated by comparing the changes in microstructure, bulk density, open porosity, grain connection situation and flexural strength of ceramics. The flexural strength of alumina ceramics acquired the maximum values of 26.4 ± 0.7 MPa and 25.1 ± 0.5 MPa after debinding under vacuum and argon for 120 min and 180 min, respectively. However, the alumina ceramics rendered the flexural strength of 19.4 ± 0.6 MPa and 9.5 ± 0.4 MPa under vacuum and argon without extended holding time, respectively. The relatively low mechanical properties can be mainly attributed to the weak interlayer binding force, which is caused by layer-by-layer forming mode during 3D printing process and anisotropic shrinkage during the sintering process. Moreover, the alumina ceramics exhibited moderate bulk density and open porosity of 2.4 g/cm3 and 42% after the sintering process, respectively, which are mainly influenced by the microstructural evolution of alumina ceramics during thermal treatment. Also, the diffusion of gases is achieved by curing of photosensitive resin and influenced by different holding times during debinding, affecting the mechanical properties of sintered ceramics. The mechanical properties of as-sintered ceramics are suitable for the utilization of ceramic cores in the manufacturing of hollow blades.  相似文献   

12.
Solid loading has a significant effect on the curing behavior of slurry and the microstructure and properties of the ceramic core. A high-solid loading slurry can effectively improve the sintering densification of ceramic particles and improve the interlayer bonding strength and mechanical properties at both 25 °C room and higher temperatures. Herein, based on the photopolymerization theory of ceramic slurry, the solid loading was increased from 45 to 60 vol% by adjusting the composition ratio of the resin ceramic powder. Additionally, the optimal sintering temperature of the 60 vol% solid loading ceramic core was 1200 °C. The synergistic effect of the solid loading and sintering temperature controls the sintering shrinkage of the sample within 3.2%; the porosity, high temperature, and room temperature flexural strength were approximately 30%, 24 MPa, and 10 MPa, respectively. The printing preparation of high-solid loading ceramic cores can be used to guide optimizing process parameters on an industrial scale.  相似文献   

13.
《Ceramics International》2021,47(21):30358-30366
Stereolithography-based 3D printing is a promising method to produce complex shapes from piezoceramic materials. In this study, LCD-SLA 3D printing was used to create lead-free piezoceramics based on barium titanate (BaTiO3, BT). Three types of BT powders (micron, submicron and nanoscale) were tested in LCD-SLA 3D printing, and a technique for the preparation of a ceramic slurry suitable for LCD-SLA printing has been developed. Using TGA-DSC analysis, the thermal debinding parameters to obtain crack-free samples were determined, followed by further sintering and the study of the piezoelectric properties (εr = 1965, d33 = 200 pC/N, tan = 1,7 %). The results of the study demonstrate high potential for the production of complex piezoceramic elements that can be used in aviation, in particular, aviation radio equipment; in the marine industry for transceiver modules of hydroacoustic antennas; and in the nuclear industry for pressure control sensors in the steam–water path.  相似文献   

14.
Digital Light Processing (DLP) is a promising technique for the preparation of ceramic parts with complex shapes and high accuracy. In this study, 3 mol% yttria-stabilized tetragonal zirconia polycrystal (Y-TZP) UV-curable slurries were prepared and printed via DLP. Two different solid loadings (40.5 and 43.6 vol%, respectively) and printing directions were investigated to assess the influence of these parameters on physical and mechanical properties of the sintered parts. Zirconia samples were sintered at 1550 °C for 1 h, achieving a very high relative density (99.2%TD), regardless of solid loading and printing direction. FE-SEM micrographs shown a homogeneous and defect-free cross section with an average grains size of 0.56 ± 0.19 µm. Finally, mechanical properties were influenced by printing direction and zirconia vol%. Indeed, the composition with the higher solid loading (i.e. 43.6 vol%) had the highest three-point flexural strength (751 ± 83 MPa) when tested perpendicular to the printing plane.  相似文献   

15.
Geometries of ceramic parts for high-temperature sealing have great influence on their compression-resilience behaviors. In this work, an accurate and large-scale artificial neural network (ANN) was established to match the relationship between structural parameters and mechanical properties of ZrO2 parts fabricated by 3D printing. Four geometry parameters of the designed ZrO2 parts were imported as input and apparent Young's modulus and maximum deformation simulated by finite element method (FEM) were imported as output. FEM calculation provided 400 groups of data for the training of ANN, which greatly improved the predicted accuracy of the network. The predicted results show the mechanical performance of the parts with a range of modulus from 9.24 × 10−3 GPa to 100.35 × 10−3 GPa and a range of maximum deformation from 2.32% to 5.80% can be forecasted with error less than 8%. Based on the optimized structural parameters, the designed ZrO2 parts were fabricated by Direct Ink Writing (DIW) technique. The experimental compression-rebound property is comparable to that of ANN prediction. It demonstrates that the combined method of ANN and FEM is a preferable way to optimize the structure and guide the fabrication of complex ceramic parts by 3D printing method.  相似文献   

16.
Silica-based ceramic cores are extensively used in investment casting process, during which they must exhibit sufficient flexural strength and deformation resistance. In this study, micro-sized mullite was used as an additive to silica-based ceramic cores to optimize their high temperature properties. To investigate the effects of micro-sized mullite on cristobalite crystallization, mechanical and thermal properties of silica-based ceramic cores, ceramic cores with different amounts of micro-sized mullite were fabricated. The XRD results showed that additional micro-sized mullite diminished the crystallization of cristobalite at high temperatures, primarily caused by the mullite related compressive stresses on the surface regions of fused silica particles. Three-point bending tests and SEM results showed that micro-sized mullite had a more significant effect on the flexural strength of ceramic cores compared with conventional additives. Particularly, the fracture mechanism of silica-based ceramic cores had been changed from intergranular fracture into a mixed fracture consisting of both intergranular and transgranular fracture. The mechanical and thermal properties of ceramic cores were all reduced slightly as the mullite content exceed 4.6 wt%. Hence, to optimize the properties of silica-based ceramic cores, the micro-sized mullite content should not exceed 4.6 wt%.  相似文献   

17.
Alumina-based ceramic cores have widespread applications especially in the investment casting of turbine blades due to chemical inertness with most of the superalloys, capability of machining in the green state, and their mechanical stability at high temperatures. The present work studied the effects of TiO2 addition to the alumina-based cores. These cores were prepared via the sol-gel method process by mixing alumina powders with NH4Cl and silica sol. The effects of adding different amounts of titania from 5 to 30 wt% and different sintering procedures on mechanical, physical, thermal, chemical, and microstructural features of the bodies were investigated. According to the results of rheology measurements of the slurries and flexural strength of the green bodies, the suitable amount of solid loading was 45 vol. %. The results showed that there is an optimum content for TiO2 addition. The specimen contained 15 wt. % titania and sintered at 1400°C for 2 hours had the thermal expansion coefficient as low as 4.8 × 10−6/°C (25-900°C), suitable mechanical properties as a result of tialite formation, and apparent porosity of 28 vol. %, respectively. The result of creep deformation test showed that this specimen had near zero deformation at 1650°C.  相似文献   

18.
The primary objective of this study is to demonstrate the possibility of developing silica, alumina, and zircon-based photocurable ceramic suspensions that can be used for visible light photopolymerization (> 450 nm) and to optimise the binder formulations for the purpose of LCD-based ceramic 3D printing applications. Reference ceramic components for this work are ceramic cores employed in the investment casting of high-pressure turbine blades and vanes. Arguably, one of the most critical steps in photoinduced ceramic 3D printing is developing suitable ceramic suspensions, having high ceramic loading, low viscosity, and short curing times. Ceramic suspensions with four different novel binder formulations and commercial ceramic powders used in core manufacturing (SiO2, Al2O3 and ZrSiO4) were investigated to achieve the best trade-off between: (1) their curing performance (cure depth and curing speed), (2) rheological properties of the binder mixtures at the solid loadings of 60 vol.% for SiO2, 55 vol.% for ZrSiO4, and 45 vol.% for Al2O3; and (3) the green body mechanical properties of the mixtures after printing. The effect of ceramic particles on the selected binders was examined individually, and the correlation between cure depth (Cd), volumetric loading, and curing speed are evaluated. The results show all binders designed in this study provide an adequate cure depth, even at high ceramic loadings. When the curing behaviour of all unloaded binder mixtures from the previous study [1] compared with the 10 vol.% SiO2 loaded mixtures, the cure depth of all formulated binder mixtures increased 50–55 % and the curing thickness of 60 vol.% SiO2 loaded suspensions were still slightly higher than their unloaded counterparts. The rheology outcomes indicate that lower viscosity binders always result in lower viscosity of the ceramic loaded inks, even without taking the effect of dispersants into account. Besides, the addition of N-Vinyl-2-Pyrrolidone (NVP) monofunctional monomer to the binder mixtures significantly reduces the viscosity and changes the normally linear relationship of the mix viscosity and its silica loading content. Among the binder formulations loaded with 60 vol.% of SiO2, the formulation providing the lowest viscosity and highest mechanical property consists of 5 wt.% of NVP, 45 wt.% of HDDA and 50 wt.% of Photocentric 34 resin. Although this binder mixture showed the highest green flexural strength when loaded by 55 vol.% ZrSiO4, all other mixtures loaded with zircon flour also demonstrated a near-fluid behaviour, below 200 s?1. In Al2O3 loaded mixtures, the HDDA di-functional binder formulations present lowest viscosity and the di- and multifunctional monomer blends (HDDA-Photocentric27) showed the highest mechanical properties when used in a 50/50 ratio. This work summarises the best binder choices for silica, alumina and zircon based ceramic suspensions used in core printing for investment casting applications through LCD screen printing.  相似文献   

19.
《Ceramics International》2023,49(15):24960-24971
Stereolithography based 3D printing provides an efficient pathway to fabricate alumina ceramics, and the exploration on the mechanical properties of 3D printed alumina ceramics is crucial to the development of 3D printing ceramic technology. However, alumina ceramics are difficult to sinter due to their high melting point. In this work, alumina ceramics were prepared via stereolithography based 3D printing technology, and the improvement in the mechanical properties was investigated based on the content, the type and the particle size of sintering aids (TiO2, CaCO3, and MgO). The flexural strength of the sintered ceramics increased greatly (from 139.2 MPa to 216.7 MPa) with the increase in TiO2 content (from 0.5 wt% to 1.5 wt%), while significant anisotropy in mechanical properties (216.7 MPa in X-Z plane and 121.0 MPa in X–Y plane) was observed for the ceramics with the addition of 1.5 wt TiO2. The shrinkage and flexural strength of the ceramics decreased with the increase in CaCO3 content due to the formation of elongated grains, which led to the formation of large-sized residual pores in the ceramics. The addition of MgO help decrease the anisotropic differences in shrinkage and flexural strength of the sintered ceramics due to the formation of regularly shaped grains. This work provides guidance on the adjustment in flexural strength, shrinkage, and anisotropic behavior of 3D printed alumina ceramics, and provides new methods for the fabrication of 3D printed alumina ceramics with superior mechanical properties.  相似文献   

20.
《Ceramics International》2022,48(20):30118-30126
Yield pseudoplastic paste is prepared for self-supported stereolithography (SLA) 3D printing with critical shear stress of 290.7 Pa and viscosity of 28810 mPa·s under strain rate of 30 s?1. Simulation analysis of paste coating is carried out based on established constitutive equation. Furthermore, corresponding stress field is analyzed under different layer thicknesses (25–100 μm) and blade speeds (1.5–4.5 mm/s). Then, flexural strength, porosity, surface roughness and microstructure of components, printed with different layer thicknesses and sintered at different temperatures, are systematically investigated. Finally, complex-shaped cores are fabricated with flexural strength of 38.56±1.45 MPa, porosity of 21.57±0.8% and surface roughness of Ra < 3 μm. The optimized parameters include layer thickness of 25–50 μm, blade speed of 3.5 mm/s, and sintering temperature of 1300 oC. Moreover, step-like undulating fracture morphology of the core is observed along printing layer, which shows that the coating process has an important influence on the mechanical properties of ceramic parts.  相似文献   

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