Abstract

Three-dimensional (3D) printing in soil science is relatively rare but offers promising directions for research. Having 3D-printed soil samples will help academics and researchers conduct experiments in a reproducible and participatory research network and gain a better understanding of the studied soil parameters. One of the most important challenges in utilizing 3D printing techniques for soil modeling is the manufacturing of a soil structure. Until now, the most widespread method for printing porous soil structures is based on scanning a real sample via X-ray tomography. The aim of this paper is to design a porous soil structure based on mathematical models rather than on samples themselves. This can allow soil scientists to design and parameterize their samples according to their desired experiments. An open-source toolchain is developed using a Lua script, in the IceSL slicer, with graphical user interface to enable researchers to create and configure their digital soil models, called monoliths, without using meshing algorithms or STL files which reduce the resolution of the model. Examples of monoliths are 3D-printed in polylactic acid using fused filament fabrication technology with a layer thickness of 0.20, 0.12, and 0.08 mm. The images generated from the digital model slicing are analyzed using open-source ImageJ software to obtain information about internal geometrical shape, porosity, tortuosity, grain size distribution, and hydraulic conductivities. The results show that the developed script enables designing reproducible numerical models that imitate soil structures with defined pore and grain sizes in a range between coarse sand (from 1 mm diameter) to fine gravel (up to 12 mm diameter).

Highlights

  • The use of 3D printing to fabricate open hardware for scientific use reduces the cost by 92% compared to proprietary commercial tools [5] and has been used in a wide variety of sciences

  • The images generated from the digital model slicing were analyzed using open-source ImageJ software to obtain information about internal geometrical shape, porosity, tortuosity, grain size distribution, and hydraulic conductivities

  • The results showed that the developed open-source script enabled all researchers to design reproducible numerical models that imitated soil structures with defined pore and grain sizes with the following observations: 5. Conclusions

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Summary

Introduction

Additive manufacturing (AM), known as 3D printing, is driving major innovation in many research and industrial areas. It is commonly used to manufacture scientific research tools to increase reproducibility, lower costs, and improve accessibility [1,2,3,4]. The use of 3D printing to fabricate open hardware for scientific use reduces the cost by 92% compared to proprietary commercial tools [5] and has been used in a wide variety of sciences. In geoscience, a number of studies have employed 3D printing techniques to investigate its capabilities in rock mechanics to reproduce strength in common rock mechanics tests [6,7] in replicating natural rock joint specimens to study

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