Torres Arango Maria A, Zhang Yugang, Li Ruipeng, Doerk Gregory, Fluerasu Andrei, Wiegart Lutz
National Synchrotron Light Source II, Brookhaven National Laboratory, 744 Brookhaven Avenue, Upton, New York 11973, United States.
Center for Functional Nanomaterials, Brookhaven National Laboratory, 735 Brookhaven Avenue, Upton, New York 11973, United States.
ACS Appl Mater Interfaces. 2020 Nov 11;12(45):51044-51056. doi: 10.1021/acsami.0c14743. Epub 2020 Nov 2.
3D printing of amorphous and crystalline ceramics is of paramount importance for the fabrication of a wide range of devices with applications across different technology fields. Printed ceramics are remarkably enabled by the sol-gel synthesis method in conjunction with continuous filament direct ink writing. During printing, multiple processes contribute to the evolution of inks including shape retention, chemical conversion, solidification, and microstructure formation. Traditionally, depending on the ink composition and printing environment, several mechanisms have been associated with the shape retention and solidification of 3D printed structures: gelation, rapid solvent evaporation, energy-driven phase transformation, and chemical-driven phase transformation. Understanding the fundamental differences between these mechanisms becomes key since they strongly influence the spatiotemporal evolution of the materials, as the out-of-equilibrium processes inherent to the extrusion, relaxation, and solidification of printed materials have significant effects on the materials properties. In this work, we investigate the shape retention mechanism and the hydrolysis-induced material conversion and microstructure formation during the 3D printing of a water reactive sol-gel ink that transforms into titanium dioxide-based ceramic. This study aims at identifying characteristic mechanisms associated with the material transformation, establishing connections between the microstructure development and the timescales associated with solidification under 3D-printing conditions. The investigation of this material's out-of-equilibrium pathways under processing conditions is enabled by time-resolved coherent X-ray scattering, providing simultaneous access to temporospatially resolved microstructural and dynamics information. Furthermore, we explore X-ray speckle tracking as a tool to resolve deformations of the microstructure in a printed filament associated with the deposition of consecutive filaments. Through this work, we aim at providing a fundamental understanding of the relationships behind these transformative processes in 3D printing and their timescales as the basis for achieving unprecedented control over printed materials microstructure.
非晶态和晶态陶瓷的3D打印对于制造广泛应用于不同技术领域的各种器件至关重要。溶胶-凝胶合成法与连续长丝直接墨水书写相结合,极大地推动了陶瓷打印技术的发展。在打印过程中,多种过程会影响墨水的演变,包括形状保持、化学转化、固化和微观结构形成。传统上,根据墨水成分和打印环境,几种机制与3D打印结构的形状保持和固化有关:凝胶化、快速溶剂蒸发、能量驱动的相变和化学驱动的相变。了解这些机制之间的根本差异变得至关重要,因为它们强烈影响材料的时空演变,因为打印材料的挤出、松弛和固化所固有的非平衡过程对材料性能有重大影响。在这项工作中,我们研究了一种水反应性溶胶-凝胶墨水在3D打印过程中的形状保持机制、水解诱导的材料转化和微观结构形成,该墨水会转化为二氧化钛基陶瓷。本研究旨在识别与材料转化相关的特征机制,建立微观结构发展与3D打印条件下固化相关时间尺度之间的联系。通过时间分辨相干X射线散射,可以对这种材料在加工条件下的非平衡路径进行研究,从而同时获取时空分辨的微观结构和动力学信息。此外,我们探索了X射线散斑跟踪作为一种工具,以解决与连续长丝沉积相关的打印长丝中微观结构的变形问题。通过这项工作,我们旨在对3D打印中这些转变过程背后的关系及其时间尺度有一个基本的了解,以此作为实现对打印材料微观结构前所未有的控制的基础。