Printing
of Hydrophobic Materials in Fumed Silica
Nanoparticle Suspension
Posted on 2019-08-05 - 16:36
Freeform three-dimensional (3D) printing
of functional structures
from liquid hydrophobic build materials is of great significance and
widely used in various fields such as soft robotics and microfluidics.
In particular, a yield-stress support bath-enabled 3D-printing methodology
has been emerging to fabricate complex 3D structures. Unfortunately,
the reported support bath materials are either hydrophobic or not
versatile enough for the printing of a wide range of hydrophobic materials.
The objective of this study is to propose a fumed silica nanoparticle-based
yield-stress suspension as a hydrophobic support bath to enable 3D
extrusion printing of various hydrophobic ink materials in a printing-then-solidification
fashion. Hydrophobic ink is freeform-deposited in a hydrophobic fumed
silica-mineral oil suspension and maintains its shape during printing;
it is not cured until the whole structure is complete. Various hydrophobic
inks including poly(dimethylsiloxane) (PDMS), SU-8 resin, and epoxy-based
conductive ink are printed into complex 3D structures in the fumed
silica-mineral oil bath and then cured using relevant cross-linking
mechanisms, even at a temperature as high as 90 °C, to prove
the feasibility and versatility of the proposed printing approach.
In addition, the deposited feature can easily reach a much better
resolution such as 30 μm for PDMS filaments due to the negligible
interfacial tension effect.