Abstract

Three-dimensional printing has already been shown to be beneficial to the fabrication of custom-fit and functional products in different industry sectors such as orthopaedics, implantology and dental technology. Especially in personal protective equipment and sportswear, three-dimensional printing offers opportunities to produce functional garments fitted to body contours by directly printing protective and (posture) supporting elements on textiles. In this article, different flexible thermoplastic elastomers, namely, thermoplastic polyurethanes and thermoplastic styrene block copolymers with a Shore hardness range of 67A–86A are tested as suitable printing materials by means of extrusion-based fused deposition modelling. For this, adhesion force, abrasion and wash resistance tests are conducted using various knitted and woven workwear and sportswear fabrics primarily made of cotton, polyester or aramid as textile substrates. Due to polar interactions between thermoplastic polyurethane and textile substrates, excellent adhesion and high fastness to washing is observed. While fused-deposition-modelling-printed polyether-based thermoplastic polyurethane polymers keep their abrasion–resistant properties, polyester-based thermoplastic polyurethanes are more prone to hydrolysis and can be partially degraded if presence of moisture cannot be excluded during polymer processing and printing. Thermoplastic styrene compounds generally exhibit lower adhesion and abrasion resistance, but these properties can be sufficient depending on the requirements of a particular application. Soft thermoplastic styrene filaments can be processed down to a Shore hardness of 70A resulting in three-dimensional printed parts with good quality and comfortable soft-touch surface. Finally, three demonstrator case studies are presented covering the entire process to realize the customized and three-dimensional printed textile. This encompasses product development and fabrication of a textile integrated custom-fit back protector and knee protector as well as customized functionalization of a technical interior textile for improved acoustic comfort. In the future, printing material modifications by compounding processes have to be taken into account for optimized functional performance.

Highlights

  • Additive manufacturing, known as three-dimensional printing (3DP), opens up new possibilities for improvement and innovation of products profiting from a digitized process chain

  • All knitwear samples have an open textile structure made of multifilament yarn, staple fibre single yarn or twine which constitutes an important prerequisite for the polymer melt to penetrate deeply into the fabric

  • Difference in chemical composition of Thermoplastic styrene (TPS) compared with TPU lead to lower adhesion forces which, can be still sufficient when printed on knitwear

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Summary

Introduction

Known as three-dimensional printing (3DP), opens up new possibilities for improvement and innovation of products profiting from a digitized process chain. In this study, selected TPE materials are tested as printing polymers for extrusion-based 3DP technologies on application-oriented textile fabrics. Main performance characteristics of 3D printed structures like adhesion properties, washing and abrasion resistance required for garment use are evaluated.

Results
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