Abstract

3D structured ceramics stemmed from preceramic polymers via additive manufacturing have attracted much attention recently. However, these polymers with high ceramic yield are so brittle that extrusion-based additive manufacturing techniques are hardly able to be utilized for assembling 3D structures. Herein, we developed a strategy to prepare feedstocks for these manufacturing techniques, i.e., utilizing a small amount of thermal-plastic polymer to optimize the preceramic polymer while good compatibility is required between the two polymers to ensure a homogeneous mixture. Polycarbosilane and polypropylene were selected as the representative materials. Polypropylene occupied a small proportion (≤5wt.%) and significantly improved the formability of the precursor. Three-dimensional SiC were obtained via fused deposition modeling combined with crosslinking and pyrolysis. The SiC ceramic filaments showed a mean tensile strength of 471 MPa. The strategy is also applicable to a large field of ceramic systems with corresponding precursor, such as sialon ceramic and multicomponent Si-based ceramics.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call