Abstract

Ice is emerging as a promising sacrificial material in the rapidly expanding area of advanced manufacturing for creating precise 3D internal geometries. Freeform 3D printing of ice (3D-ICE) can produce microscale ice structures with smooth walls, hierarchical transitions, and curved and overhang features. However, controlling 3D-ICE is challenging due to an incomplete understanding of its complex physics involving heat transfer, fluid dynamics, and phase changes. This work aims to advance our understanding of 3D-ICE physics by combining numerical modeling and experimentation. We developed a 2D thermo-fluidic model to analyze the transition from layered to continuous printing and a 3D thermo-fluidic model for the oblique deposition, which enables curved and overhang geometries. Experiments are conducted and compared with model simulations. We found that high droplet deposition rates enable the continuous deposition mode with a sustained liquid cap on top of the ice, facilitating smooth geometries. The diameter of ice structures is controlled by the droplet deposition frequency. Oblique deposition causes unidirectional spillover of the liquid cap and asymmetric heat transfer at the freeze front, rotating the freeze front. These results provide valuable insights for reproducible 3D-ICE printing that could be applied across various fields, including tissue engineering, microfluidics, and soft robotics.

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