High Performance Polymers in Additive Manufacturing Processes: Understanding
Process, Structure and Property.
Manuel Garcia-Leiner
1
, Daniel P. Dennies
2
and Atif Yardimci
3
1.
Exponent, Inc. Polymer Science and Materials Chemistry, Bowie, MD, USA.
2.
Exponent, Inc. Materials and Corrosion Engineering, Irvine, CA, USA.
3.
Exponent, Inc. Biomedical Engineering, Chicago, IL, USA.
Additive Manufacturing (AM), otherwise known as three-dimensional (3D) printing, is a growing
technology area comprised of a spectrum of processes that allow production of three-dimensional solid
objects of virtually any shape from information obtained from a digital object. These days, AM
processes are driving major innovations in multiple areas, such as engineering, manufacturing, art,
education and medicine. In its broadest sense, AM processes use additive approaches where materials
are applied in successive layers in order to produce a final part, differing from traditional subtractive
manufacturing techniques that often rely on the removal of materials by methods such as cutting or
milling. AM processes are not necessarily new. They were introduced commercially in the early 90’s for
the manufacture of complex metal parts and have almost a 30-year history for plastic objects, mainly
due to prototyping efforts that drove the development of multiple commercial products using techniques
from stereo-lithography to laser based powder based fusion processes.
The global market size for AM products is expanding at a rapid pace. Even though the manufacturing
costs for AM remain higher compared to conventional processes, significant reduction in efficiency and
logistics in the coming years would make AM approaches attractive for specific cases, especially
through reduction of tooling costs, design freedom and reduction in assembly requirements. High
demanding applications such as medical, aerospace, oil and gas exploration, military and defense and
semiconductor applications will benefit directly from the expected growth of AM processes.
A growing number of polymeric resins are becoming available due to developments of new processes
and technological advancements in AM. Specifically, high-performance thermoplastics are perhaps the
most promising material candidates for the adoption of AM into high demanding engineering
applications. Because of this, the fundamental understanding of the AM process physics, as well as the
resulting structure of high-performance thermoplastics and its relation to their performance in critical
environments is crucial for the development of new technologies and complex processing techniques.
In this regard, we provide a series of examples where polymeric systems are used for the production of
parts for high demanding applications using various AM processes. In particular, this work describes an
in depth study of the morphological changes observed in selected high performance polymer resins
when subjected to conditions typically observed in common AM processes, including powder bed fusion
processes such as Selective Laser Sintering (SLS), as well as extrusion-based approaches such as Fused
Deposition Modeling (FDM).
In this study, we use selected poly(etherketoneketone) (PEKK) resins that due to their superior
properties (including extremely high thermal properties and polymorphic crystalline nature, superior
mechanical properties, chemical resistance and low flammability) represent a viable material choice for
various high demanding engineering applications. We focus on the analysis of the crystal structure and
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doi:10.1017/S1431927615001439 © Microscopy Society of America 2015
Microsc. Microanal. 21 (Suppl 3), 2015
Paper No. 0064