TY - JOUR
T1 - Effects of Angular Corners on Short Fiber Orientation and Mechanical Integrity in Extrusion 3D Printing
AU - Yan, Jiongyi
AU - Cao, Minghua
AU - Su, Yutai
AU - Gleadall, Andrew
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
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PY - 2026
Y1 - 2026
N2 - Angular paths and corners are common in toolpaths in material extrusion additive manufacturing and could affect shear and material flow. This study focuses on 3D printed corners by using short fibre reinforced materials regarding the fibre orientation and mechanics. 3D fibre orientation tensor at different turn angles (30°-150°) was measured, and main-axis alignment was low when it turned orthogonally, while out-of-plane alignment increased with the angles. The fibre orientation closely links to mechanical properties. Tensile tests showed decreasing response force with increasing turn angles, and failure was attributed to fibre pull-out, fibre displacement, and matrix plastic deformation. We built 2D finite-element models of the 150° corner with the composite Hashin damage criterion and energy-based damage evolution law, in order to simulate large deformation failure model. The mechanical simulation successfully captured important features of specimen fracture due to crack initiation and propagation, which agreed with the experiment. Finally, cyclic tensile of displacement-controlled modes showed fast mechanical degradation of the sharp corners (greater turn angles) and compliance of smaller turn angles. This study highlights the variation of fibre orientation and mechanical weakness at corners, especially for sharp corners. It may enlighten design strategies (e.g. lattices with angular corners) to control fibre orientation and avoid mechanical weakness.
AB - Angular paths and corners are common in toolpaths in material extrusion additive manufacturing and could affect shear and material flow. This study focuses on 3D printed corners by using short fibre reinforced materials regarding the fibre orientation and mechanics. 3D fibre orientation tensor at different turn angles (30°-150°) was measured, and main-axis alignment was low when it turned orthogonally, while out-of-plane alignment increased with the angles. The fibre orientation closely links to mechanical properties. Tensile tests showed decreasing response force with increasing turn angles, and failure was attributed to fibre pull-out, fibre displacement, and matrix plastic deformation. We built 2D finite-element models of the 150° corner with the composite Hashin damage criterion and energy-based damage evolution law, in order to simulate large deformation failure model. The mechanical simulation successfully captured important features of specimen fracture due to crack initiation and propagation, which agreed with the experiment. Finally, cyclic tensile of displacement-controlled modes showed fast mechanical degradation of the sharp corners (greater turn angles) and compliance of smaller turn angles. This study highlights the variation of fibre orientation and mechanical weakness at corners, especially for sharp corners. It may enlighten design strategies (e.g. lattices with angular corners) to control fibre orientation and avoid mechanical weakness.
KW - 3D printing
KW - corners
KW - fatigue
KW - fibre orientation
KW - tensile properties
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105030594362
U2 - 10.1016/j.prostr.2026.01.019
DO - 10.1016/j.prostr.2026.01.019
M3 - 会议文章
AN - SCOPUS:105030594362
SN - 2452-3216
VL - 77
SP - 135
EP - 142
JO - Procedia Structural Integrity
JF - Procedia Structural Integrity
T2 - 6th International Conference on Structural Integrity, ICSI 2025
Y2 - 1 September 2025 through 4 September 2025
ER -