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Three‐Dimensional Printing of Complex‐Shaped Alumina/Glass Composites
Author(s) -
Zhang Wei,
Melcher Reinhold,
Travitzky Nahum,
Bordia Rajendra Kumar,
Greil Peter
Publication year - 2009
Publication title -
advanced engineering materials
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.938
H-Index - 114
eISSN - 1527-2648
pISSN - 1438-1656
DOI - 10.1002/adem.200900213
Subject(s) - materials science , composite material , flexural strength , porosity , microstructure , fracture toughness , vickers hardness test , flexural modulus , modulus , elastic modulus
Alumina/glass composites were fabricated by three‐dimensional printing (3DP™) and pressureless infiltration of lanthanum‐alumino‐silicate glass into sintered porous alumina preforms. The preforms were printed using an alumina/dextrin powder blend as a precursor material. They were sintered at 1600 °C for 2 h prior to glass infiltration at 1100 °C for 2 h. The influence of layer thickness and sample orientation within the building chamber of the 3D‐printer on microstructure, porosity, and mechanical properties of the preforms and final composites was investigated. The increase of the layer thickness from 90 to 150 µm resulted in an increase of the total porosity from ∼19 to ∼39 vol% and thus, in a decrease of the mechanical properties of the sintered preforms. Bending strength and elastic modulus of sintered preforms were found to attain significantly higher values for samples orientated along the Y ‐axis of the 3D‐printer compared to those orientated along the X ‐ or the Z ‐axis, respectively. Fabricated Al 2 O 3 /glass composites exhibit improved fracture toughness, bending strength, Young's modulus, and Vickers hardness up to 3.6 MPa m 1/2 , 175 MPa, 228 GPa, and 12 GPa, respectively. Prototypes were fabricated on the basis of computer tomography data and computer aided design data to show geometric capability of the process.