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Accurate additive manufacturing of lightweight and elastic carbons using plastic precursors

Author

Listed:
  • Paul Smith

    (The University of Southern Mississippi)

  • Jiayue Hu

    (Temple University)

  • Anthony Griffin

    (The University of Southern Mississippi)

  • Mark Robertson

    (The University of Southern Mississippi)

  • Alejandro Güillen Obando

    (The University of Southern Mississippi)

  • Ethan Bounds

    (The University of Southern Mississippi)

  • Carmen B. Dunn

    (The University of Southern Mississippi)

  • Changhuai Ye

    (Donghua University)

  • Ling Liu

    (Temple University)

  • Zhe Qiang

    (Temple University)

Abstract

Despite groundbreaking advances in the additive manufacturing of polymers, metals, and ceramics, scaled and accurate production of structured carbons remains largely underdeveloped. This work reports a simple method to produce complex carbon materials with very low dimensional shrinkage from printed to carbonized state (less than 4%), using commercially available polypropylene precursors and a fused filament fabrication-based process. The control of macrostructural retention is enabled by the inclusion of fiber fillers regardless of the crosslinking degree of the polypropylene matrix, providing a significant advantage to directly control the density, porosity, and mechanical properties of 3D printed carbons. Using the same printed plastic precursors, different mechanical responses of derived carbons can be obtained, notably from stiff to highly compressible. This report harnesses the power of additive manufacturing for producing carbons with accurately controlled structure and properties, while enabling great opportunities for various applications.

Suggested Citation

  • Paul Smith & Jiayue Hu & Anthony Griffin & Mark Robertson & Alejandro Güillen Obando & Ethan Bounds & Carmen B. Dunn & Changhuai Ye & Ling Liu & Zhe Qiang, 2024. "Accurate additive manufacturing of lightweight and elastic carbons using plastic precursors," Nature Communications, Nature, vol. 15(1), pages 1-12, December.
  • Handle: RePEc:nat:natcom:v:15:y:2024:i:1:d:10.1038_s41467-024-45211-4
    DOI: 10.1038/s41467-024-45211-4
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    References listed on IDEAS

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