| Literature DB >> 33375135 |
Marianna Rinaldi1,2, Federico Cecchini3, Lucia Pigliaru4, Tommaso Ghidini4, Francesco Lumaca3, Francesca Nanni1,2.
Abstract
Recent improvements in additive layer manufacturing (ALM) have provided new designs of geometrically complex structures with lighter materials and low processing costs. The use of additive manufacturing in spacecraft production is opening up many new possibilities in both design and fabrication, allowing for the reduction of the weight of the structure subsystems. In this aim, polymeric ALM structures can become a choice, in terms of lightweight and demisability, as far as good thermomechanical properties. Moreover, provided that fused-deposition modeling (FDM) is used, nanosats and other structures could be easily produced in space. However, the choice of the material is a crucial step of the process, as the final performance of the printed parts is strongly dependent on three pillars: design, material, and printing process. As a high-performance technopolymer, polyether ether ketone (PEEK) has been adopted to fabricate parts via ALM; however, the space compatibility of 3D-printed parts remains not demonstrated. This work aimed to realize a nanosat polymeric structure via FDM, including all the phases of the development process: thermomechanical design, raw material selection, printing process tuning, and manufacturing of a proof of concept of a technological model. The design phase includes the application of topology optimization to maximize mass saving and take full advantage of the ALM capability. 3D-printed parts were characterized via thermomechanical tests, outgassing tests of 3D-printed parts are reported confirming the outstanding performance of polyether ether ketone and its potential as a material for structural space application.Entities:
Keywords: PEEK; additive manufacturing; fused-deposition modeling; nanosat; outgassing; polyether ether ketone; system design; topology optimization
Year: 2020 PMID: 33375135 DOI: 10.3390/polym13010011
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Polymers (Basel) ISSN: 2073-4360 Impact factor: 4.329