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1.
Polymers (Basel) ; 16(14)2024 Jul 09.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39065283

RESUMO

One of the useful features of 3D-printed specimens of recycled polyethylene terephthalate glycol (R-PETG) is the ability to repetitively develop free recovery as well as the work-generating, shape-memory effect. This behavior is enabled by the R-PETG's capacity to stiffen during cooling, thus allowing for a new temporary shape to be induced. Aiming to devise an explanation for the polymer's stiffening, in this study, the variation in some of the R-PETG's parameters during cooling are emphasized and discussed. The evolution of an R-PETG filament's shape was monitored during room-temperature-bending heating-cooling cycles. Straight-shape recovery and the complete loss of stiffness were observed at the start and the end of heating, respectively, followed by the forced straightening of the filament, performed by the operator, around 40 °C, during cooling. The tests performed by dynamic mechanical analysis disclosed the rise of the storage modulus (E') after 100 °C heating followed by either liquid-nitrogen- or air-cooling to room temperature, in such a way that E' was always larger after cooling than initially. Static tests emphasized a peculiar stress variation during a heating-cooling cycle applied in air, within the heating chamber of the tensile testing machine. Tensile-failure tests were performed at -10 °C at a rate of 100 mm/min, with specimens printed at various deposition directions between 10 and 40° to the transversal direction. The specimens printed at 40°, which had the largest ultimate strains, were broken with tensile rates between 100 and 500 mm/min. Deformation rate increase favored the shift from crazing to delamination failure modes. The correlation between the structural changes, the sharp E' increase on heating, and the stiffening induced by cooling represents a novel approach that enables the use of 3D-printed R-PETG for the fabrication of the active parts of low-priced lightweight resettable actuators.

2.
Polymers (Basel) ; 15(10)2023 May 19.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37242954

RESUMO

From commercial pellets of recycled polyethylene terephthalate glycol (R-PETG), 1.75 mm diameter filaments for 3D printing were produced. By varying the filament's deposition direction between 10° and 40° to the transversal axis, parallelepiped specimens were fabricated by additive manufacturing. When bent at room temperature (RT), both the filaments and the 3D-printed specimens recovered their shape during heating, either without any constraint or while lifting a load over a certain distance. In this way, free-recovery and work-generating shape memory effects (SMEs) were developed. The former could be repeated without any visible fatigue marks for as much as 20 heating (to 90 °C)-RT cooling-bending cycles, while the latter enabled the lifting of loads over 50 times heavier than the active specimens. Tensile static failure tests revealed the superiority of the specimens printed at larger angles over those printed at 10°, since the specimens printed at 40° had tensile failure stresses and strains over 35 MPa and 8.5%, respectively. Scanning electron microscopy (SEM) fractographs displayed the structure of the successively deposited layers and a shredding tendency enhanced by the increase in the deposition angle. Differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) analysis enabled the identification of the glass transition between 67.5 and 77.3 °C, which might explain the occurrence of SMEs in both the filament and 3D-printed specimens. Dynamic mechanical analysis (DMA) emphasized a local increase in storage modulus of 0.87-1.66 GPa that occurred during heating, which might explain the development of work-generating SME in both filament and 3D-printed specimens. These properties recommend 3D-printed parts made of R-PETG as active elements in low-price lightweight actuators operating between RT and 63 °C.

3.
Nanomaterials (Basel) ; 12(12)2022 Jun 17.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35745427

RESUMO

Active elements made of Ti50Ni45Cu5 shape memory alloy (SMA) were martensitic at room temperature (RT) after hot rolling with instant water quenching. These pristine specimens were subjected to two thermomechanical training procedures consisting of (i) free recovery shape memory effect (FR-SME) and (ii) work generating shape memory effect (WG-SME) under constant stress as well as dynamic bending and RT static tensile testing (TENS). The structural-functional changes, caused by the two training procedures as well as TENS were investigated by various experimental techniques, including differential scanning calorimetry (DSC), dynamic mechanical analysis (DMA), X-ray diffraction (XRD), and atomic force microscopy (AFM). Fragments cut from the active regions of trained specimens or from the elongated gauges of TENS specimens were analyzed by DSC, XRD, and AFM. The DSC thermograms revealed the shift in critical transformation temperatures and a diminution in specific absorbed enthalpy as an effect of training cycles. The DMA thermograms of pristine specimens emphasized a change of storage modulus variation during heating after the application of isothermal dynamical bending at RT. The XRD patterns and AMF micrographs disclosed the different evolution of martensite plate variants as an effect of FR-SME cycling and of being elongated upon convex surfaces or compressed upon concave surfaces of bent specimens. For illustrative reasons, the evolution of unit cell parameters of B19' martensite, as a function of the number of cycles of FR-SME training, upon concave regions was discussed. AFM micrographs emphasized wider and shallower martensite plates on the convex region as compared to the concave one. With increasing the number of FR-SME training cycles, plates' heights decreased by 84-87%. The results suggest that FR-SME training caused marked decreases in martensite plate dimensions, which engendered a decrease in specific absorbed enthalpy during martensite reversion.

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