Investigating thermal strains and chemical shrinkage in tomographic volumetric additive manufacturing

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Abstract

Volumetric additive manufacturing provides many advantages over more traditional layer-based additive manufacturing methods by permitting support-free printing with isotropic material properties. However, accurate geometry reproduction remains a challenge. This work presents two models to investigate the contributions of thermal strains and chemical shrinkage to parts made via tomographic volumetric additive manufacturing. A thermal model, with invariant material properties and uniform cure progression, reproduces similar magnitude deformations to those seen experimentally. Through a parameter study and partial least squares regression, for a target cube geometry, deformations are found to be dominated by the heat transfer coefficient. A second model investigates non-uniform chemical shrinkage predicting smaller deformations but better capturing the deformed shape. This work concludes that a combination of primarily thermal strains and secondarily chemical shrinkage is thus required to capture this geometric infidelity paving the way to better understanding the deformation phenomena.
Original languageEnglish
Article number104781
JournalAdditive Manufacturing
Volume105
Number of pages12
ISSN2214-8604
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2025

Keywords

  • Chemical shrinkage
  • Geometry deformation
  • Thermal strains
  • Volumetric additive manufacturing

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