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3D-printed foam proves more durable than traditional cellular materials

"There is no reason not to consider replacing traditional foam with appropriately designed 3D-printed foam in specific future applications," said researcher Amitesh Maiti.

By Brooks Hays
3D printers create foams with a more uniform internal structure. Photo by LLNL
3D printers create foams with a more uniform internal structure. Photo by LLNL

LIVERMORE, Calif., April 27 (UPI) -- According to material scientists at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, 3D-printed foam is more durable and functional than cellular materials.

Traditional foams, or cellular solids, have a wide variety of industrial applications. They're used for insulation and shock absorption, found in airplane wings and boat hulls.

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Current foam production processes result in a heterogeneous consistency, the material's cells varied in size, shape and organization. Additive manufacturing, the building process used by 3D printers, allows for a more uniform and specifically structured cellular material.

To see if foams created by 3D printers could stand up to traditional foams, a team of researchers at LLNL put a series of foams through an advanced aging process -- subjecting them to a series of stress tests to replicate weeks and months of wear and tear.

Foams made via 3D printing aged slower, maintaining their mechanical and structural characteristics for longer.

X-ray images showed that stress fractures inside traditional foams varied greatly from location to location, with maximum local stress points greater than those suffered within 3D-printed foam.

Researchers shared the tests results in the journal Scientific Reports.

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"3D printing of foams offers tremendous flexibility in creating programmable architectures, customizable shapes and tunable mechanical response," lead study author Amitesh Maiti said in a news release. "Now that our work strongly indicates superior long-term stability and performance of the printed material, there is no reason not to consider replacing traditional foam with appropriately designed 3D-printed foam in specific future applications."

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