• Title/Summary/Keyword: Printing orientation

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Evaluation of flexural properties and reliability with photo-curing 3D printing resin according to the printing orientations (광경화성 3D 프린팅 레진의 출력각도에 따른 굽힘 특성과 신뢰성 평가)

  • Im, Yong-Woon;Song, Doo-Bin;Hwang, Seong-Sig;Kim, Sa-Hak;Han, Man-So
    • Journal of Technologic Dentistry
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    • v.43 no.1
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    • pp.13-18
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    • 2021
  • Purpose: This study aimed to compare the flexural properties and perform the Weibull analysis of photo-curing three-dimensional (3D) printing resin. Methods: Photo-curing temporary resin (3D polymer) was used as a printing resin. Specimens (65 × 10 × 3.3 ㎣) were prepared following the ISO 20975-1 guidelines and according to the different printing orientations using a digital light processing 3D printer (D2 120; Dentium). The flexural strength (FS), flexural modulus, and work of fracture (WOF) were measured using a universal testing machine (Instron 3344; Instron) at a crosshead speed of 5 mm/min. Results: In this study, the 0° orientation exhibited higher FS and WOF than the 45° orientation. Significant differences were found among the printing orientations (p<0.05). Specimens printed at the 0° orientation were the most accurate. In the Weibull analysis, 0° showed the greatest Weibull modulus (m), which represents a higher reliability. Conclusion: 3D printing should be selected and used by considering flexural properties, size accuracy, and reliability.

A Study on the Mechanical Properties Experiment for Architectural Application of Polyamide-12 MJF 3D Printing Material - Focusing on the Change in Tensile Properties According to the 3D Printing Orientation - (MJF 3D 프린팅 기반 폴리아미드-12 소재의 건축적 활용을 위한 기계적 특성 실험에 관한 연구 - 출력 방향에 따른 인장 특성 변화를 중심으로 -)

  • Park, Sangjae;Yoo, Seungkyu;Kim, Munhwan;Kim, Jaejun
    • Korean Journal of Construction Engineering and Management
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    • v.21 no.6
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    • pp.95-102
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    • 2020
  • The number of use cases in machinery, aviation, and other industries that manufacture precise parts is increasing, and the construction industry is also increasingly using 3D printing technology. Although various materials for 3D printing are currently being developed and utilized, 3D printing manufacturing has a problem that the mechanical properties of the product may change when compared with conventional manufacturing methods such as injection and molding. This paper verifies the effect of the printing orientation on the mechanical properties of the product in the manufacture of PA12 material and providing basic data on the practical use of the materials as building subsidiary materials and structural materials. The results of the experiment showed that the product printed in the orientation of 0° showed the lowest overall strength and elongation rate, and the product printed in the orientation of 45° showed the highest figure. Overall, tensile strength and yield strength increased between 0° and 45°, and tended to decrease somewhat at 45° to 90°.

Liquid Crystal-based Imaging of Biomolecular Interactions at Roller Printed Protein Surfaces

  • Park, Min-Kyung;Jang, Chang-Hyun
    • Bulletin of the Korean Chemical Society
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    • v.31 no.5
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    • pp.1223-1227
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    • 2010
  • In this study, the orientational behavior of thermotropic liquid crystals (LC) supported on a film of protein receptors was examined. Avidin was roller printed and covalently immobilized onto the surface of gold using NHS/EDC chemistry. The orientation of nematic 4-cyano-4'-pentylbiphenyl (5CB) was found to be parallel to the plane of the printed avidin surface before incubation with a solution of biotin. However, protein-receptor complexation induced a random orientation of 5CB, where protein-receptor complexes disturbed the nanoscale topography of the printed protein surface. Atomic force microscopy and ellipsometry was used to confirm printing and the specific interaction of proteins. These results demonstrate that the combination of LC and roller printing can be used to detect specific interactions between biomolecules by manipulating the orientational behavior of LC to the printed protein surfaces.

Development of a New On-line fiber Orientation Sensor Based on Dielectric Anisotropy

  • Nagata, Shinichi
    • Journal of Korea Technical Association of The Pulp and Paper Industry
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    • v.34 no.5
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    • pp.49-55
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    • 2002
  • A new method is proposed for the on-line measurement of the fiber orientation of sheet materials. The measurement of fiber orientation is very important in manufacturing paper sheets, non-woven fabrics, and glass sheets, because fiber orientation strongly affects product properties represented by, for example, dimensional stability of paper. A method developed in this research utilizes anisotropy of dielectric constants of sheet materials as a key characteristic to determine the fiber orientation. The new on-line sensor, consisting of 5 microwave dielectric resonators set in different directions, was designed to detect the fiber orientation while paper is running with high speed on a paper machine. This sensor can determine the direction and the degree of fiber orientation from the measured direction of the maximal dielectric constant and its variation, respectively. The fundamental performance of this system was examined by the static measurement of printing grade paper, which gave a satisfactory result. Then, the dynamic measurements were done at a speed of 1,000 m/min by using a high-speed test-coating machine.

Ink-Jet Printing Technology for Color Filter

  • Jian, Zih-Jie;Liou, Wei-Jen;Lin, Hong-Ming;Lo, Yu-Cheng;Liu, Pei-Yu;Wang, Jiun-Ming;Li, Huai-An
    • 한국정보디스플레이학회:학술대회논문집
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    • 2007.08a
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    • pp.463-466
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    • 2007
  • It is a revolutionary technology of making color filters by ink-jet printing. The difficult reason of this method is that it is a merger technology of many fields. There must be perfect orientation systems, designed capacity and production equipment of automatically controlled printing head. Moreover, accurate ink with modification is also needed.

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Study on Tensile Properties of Polyamide 12 produced by Laser-based Additive Manufacturing Process (레이저 적층제조기술로 제작한 폴리아미드 12 시편의 인장특성 연구)

  • Kim, Moosun
    • Journal of the Korea Academia-Industrial cooperation Society
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    • v.20 no.11
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    • pp.217-223
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    • 2019
  • The application of 3D printing technology is expanding due to the production of the complex-shape parts and the one-step manufacturing process. Moreover, various technical solutions in 3D printing are emerging through continuous research and development. Representative technologies include SLS technology, in which a desired area is sintered and laminated by irradiating a powder-type material with a laser. In addition, high-performance engineering plastic parts are being manufactured in increasing numbers. In this study, tensile specimens were fabricated from polyamide 12, a widely available polymer, and the glass bead-reinforced polyamide 12. The specimen-build orientation was divided into 0°, 45°, and 90° on the fabrication platform, and the tensile test temperature was -25℃, 25℃, and 60℃. The test results showed that the tensile modulus of both materials decreases as the build orientation becomes closer to 90°. In addition, the tensile strength of glass bead-reinforced PA12 showed more dependence on the build orientation than PA12. In addition, the tensile modulus and tensile strength decreased with increasing test temperature.

Trueness of 3D printed partial denture frameworks: build orientations and support structure density parameters

  • Hussein, Mostafa Omran;Hussein, Lamis Ahmed
    • The Journal of Advanced Prosthodontics
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    • v.14 no.3
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    • pp.150-161
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    • 2022
  • PURPOSE. The purpose of the study was to assess the influence of build orientations and density of support structures on the trueness of the 3D printed removable partial denture (RPD) frameworks. MATERIALS AND METHODS. A maxillary Kennedy class III and mandibular class I casts were 3D scanned and used to design and produce two 3D virtual models of RPD frameworks. Using digital light processing (DLP) 3D printing, 47 RPD frameworks were fabricated at 3 different build orientations (100, 135 and 150-degree angles) and 2 support structure densities. All frameworks were scanned and 3D compared to the original virtual RPD models by metrology software to check 3D deviations quantitatively and qualitatively. The accuracy data were statistically analyzed using one-way ANOVA for build orientation comparison and independent sample t-test for structure density comparison at (α = .05). Points study analysis targeting RPD components and representative color maps were also studied. RESULTS. The build orientation of 135-degree angle of the maxillary frameworks showed the lowest deviation at the clasp arms of tooth 26 of the 135-degree angle group. The mandibular frameworks with 150-degree angle build orientation showed the least deviation at the rest on tooth 44 and the arm of the I-bar clasp of tooth 45. No significant difference was seen between different support structure densities. CONCLUSION. Build orientation had an influence on the accuracy of the frameworks, especially at a 135-degree angle of maxillary design and 150-degree of mandibular design. The difference in the support's density structure revealed no considerable effect on the accuracy.

Micro-Contact Printing Method for Patterning Liquid Crystal Alignment Layers

  • Jung, Jong-Wook;Kim, Hak-Rim;Lee, You-Jin;Kim, Jae-Hoon
    • Journal of Information Display
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    • v.7 no.2
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    • pp.12-15
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    • 2006
  • We propose a patterning method of liquid crystal (LC) alignment layer for producing multi-domain LC structures. By controlling thermal conditions during micro-contact printing procedures and facilitating wetting properties of patterning materials, patterned LC orientation can be easily obtained on a bare ITO surface or other polymer films. The newly proposed patterning method is expected to be a very useful tool for fabricating multi-domain LC structures to enhance or design electro-optic properties of LC-based devices.

High-Contrast Imaging of Biomolecular Interactions Using Liquid Crystals Supported on Roller Printed Protein Surfaces

  • Park, Min-Kyung;Jang, Chang-Hyun
    • Bulletin of the Korean Chemical Society
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    • v.33 no.10
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    • pp.3269-3273
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    • 2012
  • In this study, we report a new method for the high contrast imaging of biomolecular interactions at roller printed protein surfaces using thermotropic liquid crystals (LCs). Avidin was roller printed and covalently immobilized onto the obliquely deposited gold surface that was decorated with carboxylic acid-terminated self-assembled monolayers (SAMs). The optical response of LCs on the roller printed film of avidin contrasted sharply with that on the obliquely deposited gold surface. The binding of biotin-peroxidase to the roller printed avidin was then investigated on the obliquely deposited gold substrate. LCs exhibited a non-uniform and random orientation on the roller printed area decorated with the complex of avidin and biotin-peroxidase, while LCs displayed a uniform and planar orientation on the area without roller printed proteins. The orientational transition of LCs from uniform to non-uniform state was triggered by the erasion of nanometer-scale topographies on the roller printed surface after the binding of biotin-peroxidase to the surface-immobilized avidin. The specific binding events of protein-receptor interactions were also confirmed by atomic force microscopy and ellipsometry. These results demonstrate that the roller printing of proteins on obliquely deposited gold substrates could provide a high contrast signal for imaging biomolecular interactions using LC-based sensors.

Finite Element Analysis for Fracture Criterion of PolyJet Materials (PolyJet 적층재료의 파괴기준 설정을 위한 유한요소해석)

  • Kim, Dong Bum;Lee, Geun Tae;Lee, In Hwan;Cho, Hae Yong
    • Journal of the Korean Society of Manufacturing Process Engineers
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    • v.14 no.4
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    • pp.134-139
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    • 2015
  • PolyJet technology is an additive manufacturing (AM) technology commonly used for modeling, prototyping, and production applications. It is one of the techniques used for 3D printing. The PolyJet technique is a process that joins materials to fabricate a product from 3D CAD data in a layer-by-layer manner. The orientation of a layer can affect the mechanical properties of the product manufactured by the PolyJet technique because of its anisotropy. In this paper, tensile and shearing tests of specimens were developed with the PolyJet technique in order to study the mechanical properties according to the orientation of a layer. The mechanical properties of the specimens were determined on the basis of true stress-strain curves from tensile and shearing tests. In addition, the tensile and shearing tests were simulated under the same conditions as those of experiment, and the experiment and simulated results were compared. Through this study, the fracture criteria could be established.