Difference between revisions of "Additive Manufacturing with Solid Wood"

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[[Category:DCIO Proceedings]]
 
[[Category:DCIO Proceedings]]
 
[[Category:Conferences]]
 
[[Category:Conferences]]
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[http://wiki.designcomputation.org/home/index.php/DC_I/O_2020#Posters DC I/O 2020 poster] by [[JULIAN OCHS]], [[ZUARDIN AKBAR]] and [[PHILIPP EVERSMANN]].
  
[[DC I/O 2020]] proceeding by [[JULIAN OCHS]], [[ZUARDIN AKBAR]] and [[PHILIPP EVERSMANN]].
 
  
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=Abstract=
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Current commercially available additive manufacturing methods with wood filaments are based on extruding a thermoplastic which is mixed with grounded timber. Therefore, these filaments lose the inherent structural and mechanical properties of continuous fibers of timber, also having only a wood proportion of 40%. With a proportion of grounded wood, the thermoplastics’ mechanical strength can also decrease (cf. WIMMER, STEYRER, WOESS, KODDENBERG, MUNDIGLER, 2015). As thermoplastics still may take 100 to 1000 years to decompose in a non-controlled composing environment (cf. ROYTE 2006), renewable and a more biodegradable alternatives are needed.
  
=Abstract=
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We have developed an additive manufacturing method with the use of a wooden filament made of a fast-growing local plant: willow/ wicker twigs. This technique enables direct and laminated wooden-filament-extrusion without the use of thermoplastics. The material, used in this new method, keeps its natural tensile-strength, which is actually higher than beech wood, due to the unique material production and additive manufacturing technique. The willow filament is made through joining homogenized willow strips. In a continuous process, the resulting endless filament is then coated with a contact adhesive, dried. and fed into a specially designed extruder that combines up to five upright willow filaments to one single laminated square profile. The adhesive on each separate string is activated both through contact pressure and with the help of a PID (proportional–integral–derivative) controlled heat block.. Due to this technique, a fast layer-based printing method was achieved. The willow strings’ bending ability in layer direction allows design inputs with a minimum radius of 20mm. Apart from this restriction, a comparable printing experience to an FDM (Fused Deposition Modeling) based printing technique was achieved that is suitable for a large-scale application such as furniture or architectural building components.
  
 
=Keywords=
 
=Keywords=
 
[[Additive Manufacturing]], [[Wood]], [[3D-Printing]], [[Column]], [[Computational Design]], [[Fiber]]
 
[[Additive Manufacturing]], [[Wood]], [[3D-Printing]], [[Column]], [[Computational Design]], [[Fiber]]
 
=Keyphrases=
 
last call (70), wicker twig (60), pdf last call (47), tensile strength (40)
 
  
 
=Topics=
 
=Topics=
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=Reference=
 
=Reference=
 
DOI: https://doi.org/10.47330/DCIO.2020.ISIG1692
 
DOI: https://doi.org/10.47330/DCIO.2020.ISIG1692
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Video Presentation: https://youtu.be/ZgFG--gyQKA
  
 
Full text: [https://www.designcomputation.org/dcio2020 Maciel, A. (Ed.), 2020. Design Computation Input/Output 2020, 1st ed. Design Computation, London, UK. ISBN: 978-1-83812-940-8, DOI:10.47330/DCIO.2020.QPRF9890]
 
Full text: [https://www.designcomputation.org/dcio2020 Maciel, A. (Ed.), 2020. Design Computation Input/Output 2020, 1st ed. Design Computation, London, UK. ISBN: 978-1-83812-940-8, DOI:10.47330/DCIO.2020.QPRF9890]

Latest revision as of 23:37, 14 December 2020

DC I/O 2020 poster by JULIAN OCHS, ZUARDIN AKBAR and PHILIPP EVERSMANN.


Abstract

Current commercially available additive manufacturing methods with wood filaments are based on extruding a thermoplastic which is mixed with grounded timber. Therefore, these filaments lose the inherent structural and mechanical properties of continuous fibers of timber, also having only a wood proportion of 40%. With a proportion of grounded wood, the thermoplastics’ mechanical strength can also decrease (cf. WIMMER, STEYRER, WOESS, KODDENBERG, MUNDIGLER, 2015). As thermoplastics still may take 100 to 1000 years to decompose in a non-controlled composing environment (cf. ROYTE 2006), renewable and a more biodegradable alternatives are needed.

We have developed an additive manufacturing method with the use of a wooden filament made of a fast-growing local plant: willow/ wicker twigs. This technique enables direct and laminated wooden-filament-extrusion without the use of thermoplastics. The material, used in this new method, keeps its natural tensile-strength, which is actually higher than beech wood, due to the unique material production and additive manufacturing technique. The willow filament is made through joining homogenized willow strips. In a continuous process, the resulting endless filament is then coated with a contact adhesive, dried. and fed into a specially designed extruder that combines up to five upright willow filaments to one single laminated square profile. The adhesive on each separate string is activated both through contact pressure and with the help of a PID (proportional–integral–derivative) controlled heat block.. Due to this technique, a fast layer-based printing method was achieved. The willow strings’ bending ability in layer direction allows design inputs with a minimum radius of 20mm. Apart from this restriction, a comparable printing experience to an FDM (Fused Deposition Modeling) based printing technique was achieved that is suitable for a large-scale application such as furniture or architectural building components.

Keywords

Additive Manufacturing, Wood, 3D-Printing, Column, Computational Design, Fiber

Topics

Architecture, Bio-Integrated Design, Computational and Parametric Geometry, Computer-Aided Design (CAD), Construction, Engineering, Manufacturing, Resources, Technology.

Reference

DOI: https://doi.org/10.47330/DCIO.2020.ISIG1692

Video Presentation: https://youtu.be/ZgFG--gyQKA

Full text: Maciel, A. (Ed.), 2020. Design Computation Input/Output 2020, 1st ed. Design Computation, London, UK. ISBN: 978-1-83812-940-8, DOI:10.47330/DCIO.2020.QPRF9890