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Bound glass deposition printing at (lab)

A project log for Bound metal deposition printing at (lab)

Using filament and/or metallic resin and then casting if I get really desperate. Basically just trying to print metal

ahron-wayneAhron Wayne 07/20/2021 at 22:345 Comments

Soooo... this is not metal. But it is performed in almost exactly the same way as metal.

Last month I visited the virtual foundry, the company that produces these metal filaments. And while I was there, I helped extrude a new kind of filament: Glass filled. 

And it has quickly become one of my favorites. It just has a lot of interesting properties: It’s lighter than PLA, has a high fill but is still flexible and very strong, looks cool, and unlike copper can be sintered overnight in one step (glass is already bound to oxygen, so you don't have to worry about oxygen). 

Here's what comes out of the printer: 

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Check out that sparkle. When it prints, it does so super smooth with great detail! Clogs are a frequent issue, though on my creator pro with 0.4 mm steel nozzle. I even upgraded to an all metal hot end to try and fix it, which turned out not to help much. What did help, was lowering the temperature from 220 to 200 or less. I think that the plastic and glass has a tendency to separate when left sitting in the nozzle, and a lower temperature helps somewhat. I have properly taken off my nozzle and removed a solid plug of material at least a dozen times though.

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My computer is broke so I can't take a proper scan of it, but I would like to (before and after sintering), because they look really cool.

Debinding and sintering trials: it actually only took two tries to get something to work. Units in Celsius:

Ramp to 0-204 over 30 minutes 

Hold at 204 for 2 hours 

Ramp to 482 over 2.5 hours 

Hold at 482 for 3 hours 

Let cool for 2 hours (possibly unnecessary) 

Ramp to sintering temperature over 4 hours 

Hold at sintering temperature for 2 hours

Sintering temps tried so far (first based on this paper). 700, 800, 900, 1000, 1100 Celsius.

Results:

700 just falls apart when you take it out.

800, 900, and 1000 are white and porous, with decreasing porosity and increasing strength:

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You can see that the expansion during debinding is not yet a solved problem: 

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But note that there IS isotropic shrink, which was totally unexpected to me — my understanding of sintering involves production of vapor (thanks to a prof who schooled me about it), which I didn’t think glass would do. It also isn’t fair to say that it “melts” at these temperature, but rather just softens. Either way, binder goes bye-bye and glass gets stuck together.

Here is a video (proper hackaday --- hint hint, tip line) where I use the porosity to make coffee:

I tried it so you don't have to! 

One problem is that the aluminum oxide refractory gets fused to the surface of the glass:

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This is a problem because uhhh this is a problem. Especially for eventually making transparent pieces. So I’ve been experimenting with using magnesium sulfate as refractory material instead of aluminum oxide, with the idea that, even if it gets stuck, it would dissolve in water afterwards.

This worked but it shrank and became like plaster, being a pain to get out afterwards.

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You can see the comparison though, in aluminum oxide on the left and mgso4 on the right. No sticking!

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Next I want to take the temperature past 1100, the part where it starts to become solid glass, with the goal of transparency. I think this is possible to some degree --- there's a company that does this using resin, with nanoparticles of glass (the ones in here are a bit bigger, maybe ~50-100 ish microns across). So far it just blobs up. The pieces make that nice glass sound, though. 

Discussions

Paul McClay wrote 08/25/2021 at 08:35 point

novel: hat tip to you and Brad - that's really neat.

thermite: ???. self-heating crucibles? sidewalk vitrifying logo/graphics?

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Ahron Wayne wrote 07/22/2021 at 00:47 point

I actually do have a small vase part that I'm trying to turn watertight and transparent. Maybe I'll boil the water for the coffee in that once (if) I get it to work.

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Paul McClay wrote 08/22/2021 at 00:50 point

Just watched the vase vid on yt. Are you doing an original new thing here? A quick bit of google didn't turn up any glass-filled plastic filament for conventional fff printing and sintering other than what TVF is selling. When you rolled your own roll, were you following their recipe, or are they now selling what you cooked up? ("you" = in collaboration w/tvf who know how to make filament, I would assume)

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Ahron Wayne wrote 08/22/2021 at 21:34 point

There's a company that sells resin with micro particles of glass and a similar process of sintering and then I've heard of doing SLM with glass powder, and finally extrusion of molten glass (MIT got a lot of attention for it). And there are people who sell filament with glass fiber reinforcement for strength purposes.

But yeah, I think printing pure glass with filament is novel, or at least I can't find any information about it online. We played it by ear using brad's (TVF founder/inventor of metal filament) experience making new filaments. First we mixed powdered glass and the PLA blend in a compounder in different ratios. Based on this stuff that got compounded, then we (he) decided how much of each fraction would be good for printing. Then, we ground it back up, mixed it into what would be a good blend, and ran it through the extrusion line --- this is the stuff I'm using here. The stuff they're selling now to the public is a newer batch that follows a proper recipe. 

From start to filament was 3 days! For a completely new material. Next time I go we will try to make 3D printable thermite. 

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Paul McClay wrote 07/21/2021 at 23:35 point

!. What "vase mode" has been waiting for...

Time to update the project name?

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