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    Additive Manufacturing of Syntactic Foams: Part 1: Development, Properties, and Recycling Potential of Filaments
    (Minerals, Metals and Materials Society 184 Thorn Hill Road Warrendale PA 15086, 2018) Singh, A.K.; Patil, B.; Hoffmann, N.; Saltonstall, B.; Doddamani, M.; Gupta, N.
    This work focuses on developing filaments of high-density polyethylene (HDPE) and their hollow particle-filled syntactic foams for commercial three-dimensional (3D) printers based on fused filament fabrication technology. Hollow fly-ash cenospheres were blended by 40 wt.% in a HDPE matrix to produce syntactic foam (HDPE40) filaments. Further, the recycling potential was studied by pelletizing the filaments again to extrude twice (2×) and three times (3×). The filaments were tensile tested at 10?4 s?1, 10?3 s?1, and 10?2 s?1 strain rates. HDPE40 filaments show an increasing trend in modulus and strength with the strain rate. Higher density and modulus were noticed for 2× filaments compared to 1× filaments because of the crushing of some cenospheres in the extrusion cycle. However, 2× and 3× filament densities are nearly the same, showing potential for recycling them. The filaments show better properties than the same materials processed by conventional injection molding. Micro-CT scans show a uniform dispersion of cenospheres in all filaments. © 2018, The Minerals, Metals & Materials Society.
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    Dynamic impact behavior of syntactic foam core sandwich composites
    (SAGE Publications Ltd info@sagepub.co.uk, 2020) Breunig, P.; Damodaran, V.; Shahapurkar, K.; Waddar, S.; Doddamani, M.; Jeyaraj, J.; Prabhakar, P.
    Sandwich composites and syntactic foams independently have been used in many engineering applications. However, there has been minimal effort towards taking advantage of the weight saving ability of syntactic foams in the cores of sandwich composites, especially with respect to the impact response of structures. To that end, the goal of this study is to investigate the mechanical response and damage mechanisms associated with syntactic foam core sandwich composites subjected to dynamic impact loading. In particular, this study investigates the influence of varying cenosphere volume fraction in syntactic foam core sandwich composites subjected to varying dynamic impact loading and further elucidates the extent and diversity of corresponding damage mechanisms. The syntactic foam cores are first fabricated using epoxy resin as the matrix and cenospheres as the reinforcement with four cenosphere volume fractions of 0% (pure epoxy), 20%, 40%, and 60%. The sandwich composite panels are then manufactured using the vacuum assisted resin transfer molding process with carbon fiber/vinyl ester facesheets. Dynamic impact tests are performed on the sandwich composite specimens at two energy levels of 80 J and 160 J, upon which the data are post-processed to gain a quantitative understanding of the impact response and damage mechanisms incurred by the specimens. A qualitative understanding is obtained through micro-computed tomography scanning of the impacted specimens. In addition, a finite element model is developed to investigate the causes for different damage mechanisms observed in specimens with different volume fractions. © The Author(s) 2019.
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    Additive Manufacturing of Short Silk Fiber Reinforced PETG Composites
    (Elsevier Ltd, 2022) Kn, V.; Bonthu, D.; Doddamani, M.; Pati, F.
    The growing demand for customized medical devices like prostheses, orthoses, and implants is the prime motive for a surge in the investigation of 3D printable biocomposites. PETG (Polyethylene terephthalate glycol) based composites can be a good choice for biomedical applications. Specific characteristics of this material like biocompatibility, ease of formability, stable thermomechanical properties, and high chemical, and abrasion resistance make it suitable for biomedical applications. However, there are very few studies on the 3D printing of PETG-based composites. Development of a robust 3D printing protocol is required for any novel natural fiber reinforced PETG composites. This study presents natural fiber-reinforced PETG biocomposite filament preparation and 3D printing with the developed composite filaments. Silk was used as a filler material due to its high thermal stability and high tensile strength. Composite filaments with 2 wt%, 5 wt%, and 10 wt% silk were prepared using the extrusion process. Further, we developed a protocol for 3D printing with the developed composites to fabricate various 3D structure. Both filaments and printed specimens were characterized morphologically, structurally, and mechanically. The melt flow rate of the filaments decreased with an increase in fiber content which was a bottleneck for printing 10% silk-PETG composites. Micro-CT results validate an increase in void content in filaments on filler addition. The highest flexural modulus and flexural strength were exhibited by 2% silk-PETG printed parts and a 60% increase in compressive modulus compared to pure PETG. Tensile tests show that 2 wt% fiber addition significantly increased elastic modulus (2466.72 MPa) compared to pure PETG (902.81 MPa), whereas the surface roughness of printed composites increased with filler content. Finally, a lower limb prosthetic socket prototype was printed with a desktop 3D printer to demonstrate its potential for biomedical applications. © 2022 Elsevier Ltd