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ACS Nano ; 14(8): 9466-9477, 2020 Aug 25.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32491835

ABSTRACT

3D printing of cementitious materials holds a great promise for construction due to its rapid, consistent, modular, and geometry-controlled ability. However, its major drawback is low cohesion in the interlayer region. Herein, we report a combined experimental and computational approach to understand and control fabrication of 3D-printed cementitious materials with significantly enhanced interlayer strength using multimaterial 3D printing, in which the composition, function, and structure of the materials are programmed. Our results show that the intrinsic low interlayer cohesion is caused by excess moisture and time lag that block the majority of valuable interactions in the interlayer zone between the adjacent cement matrices. As a remedy, a thin epoxy layer is introduced as an intermediator between the adjacent extruded layers, both to improve the interlayer cohesion and to extend the possible time delay between printed adjacent layers. Our ab initio calculations demonstrate that an orbital overlap between the calcium ions, as the main electrophilic part of the cement structure, and the hydroxyl groups, as the nucleophilic part of the epoxy, create strong interfacial absorption sites. These electronic absorptions lead to several iono-covalent bonds between the cement matrix and epoxy, leading to significant improvements in tensile, shear, and compressive strengths as well as ductility of the 3D-printed composites. This is verified by our experimental data, which showed an average of 84% improvement in interlayer bonding. The upward augmentation of interlayer bonding helps 3D printing cementitious material to overcome their intrinsic limitation of weak interlayer cohesion, thereby mitigating/eliminating the key bottleneck of additive manufacturing in constructing materials.

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