Mass customization of polylactic acid (PLA) parts via a hybrid manufacturing process
Date
2022-12-10Author
Gong, Ke
Liu, Handai
Huang, Cheng
Jiang, Qinyu
Xu, Han
Cao, Zhi
Fuenmayor, Evert
Major, Ian
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Mass customization is the development of items tailored to specific customers, but
produced at low unit cost in high-volume. In this context, hybrid manufacturing (HM) combines
fused deposition modeling (FDM) and injection molding (IM) to fabricate a single personalized
part with minimum manufacturing cost. In this technique, inserts with different physical features
are first FDM-fabricated and then IM-overmolded. This study investigated the effect of hybrid
FDM-IM production technology, FDM insert geometry on mechanical properties, and micro-structural
evolution of Polylactic Acid (PLA) samples. The findings indicated a comparable tensile properties
of FDM-IM samples (68.38 MPa) to IM batch (68.95 MPa), emphasizing the potential of HM in the
manufacturing industry. Maximum tensile stress of FDM-IM specimens shows an upward trend
due to the increased infill density of preforms. In addition, overmolding interface direction results
in a big gap for the maximum tensile strengths between half-length series specimens (12.99 MPa
to 19.09 MPa) and half-thickness series specimens (53.83 MPa to 59.92 MPa). Furthermore, four
joint configurations resulted in different mechanical performances of finished specimens, in which
the female cube sample exhibits the highest tensile stress (68.38 MPa), while the batch with male
T joint shows a lower value in maximum tensile strength (59.51 MPa), exhibiting a similar tensile
performance with the half-thickness 75% batch without joint configuration. This study lays the
groundwork for using HM to produce bespoke and mechanically improved parts over FDM alone
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