Abstract

Abstract Recent breakthroughs in additive manufacturing of molten glass using gravity-fed mechanisms have opened a new area of research in large-scale extrusion of molten material. However, the machines and techniques used for printing molten glass are expensive and complex due to high process temperature (>1000°C). A mixture of sucrose sugar and corn syrup is proposed as an analogous substitution material for research in molten material fed three-dimensional (3D) printing. Molten sugar is optically transparent and it exhibits similar temperature–viscosity relationship and solidification properties as molten glass, but at a much lower temperature (100–150°C). A low cost, desktop size 3D printer is designed with a temperature controlled sugar reservoir made from easily obtainable parts. The process of printing with molten sugar is demonstrated with success in recreating objects with similar complexity to glass prints. The techniques described in this study can be implemented easily for future investigation...

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