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3D printing with 2D colloids: Designing rheology protocols to predict 'printability' of soft-materials

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-02, 18:42 authored by Andrew Corker, Henry Ng, Robert Poole, Garcier-Tunon Esther
Additive manufacturing (AM) techniques and so-called 2D materials have undergone an explosive growth in the past decade. The former opens multiple possibilities in the manufacturing of multifunctional complex structures, and the latter on a wide range of applications from energy to water purification. Extrusion-based 3D printing, also known as Direct Ink Writing (DIW), robocasting, and often simply 3D printing, provides a unique approach to introduce advanced and high-added-value materials with limited availability into lab-scale manufacturing. On the other hand, 2D colloids of graphene oxide (GO) exhibit a fascinating rheology and can aid the processing of different materials to develop 'printable' formulations. This work provides an in-depth rheological study of GO suspensions with a wide range of behaviours from Newtonian-like to viscoelastic 'printable' soft solids. The combination of extensional and shear rheology reveals the network formation process as GO concentration increases from <0.1 vol% to 3 vol%. Our results also demonstrate that the quantification of 'printability' can be based on three rheology parameters: the stiffness of the network via the storage modulus (G′), the solid-to-liquid transition or flow stress (σ f ), and the flow transition index, which relates the flow and yield stresses (FTI = σ f /σ y ).

History

Related Materials

  1. 1.
    DOI - Is published in 10.1039/c8sm01936c
  2. 2.
    ISSN - Is published in 1744683X

Journal

Soft Matter

Volume

15

Issue

6

Start page

1444

End page

1456

Total pages

13

Publisher

The Royal Society of Chemistry

Place published

United Kingdom

Language

English

Copyright

© The Royal Society of Chemistry 2019

Former Identifier

2006111111

Esploro creation date

2021-11-25

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