3D PRINTABLE THERMOPLASTIC ELASTOMER BLENDS
20220315753 · 2022-10-06
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
B33Y10/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
C08L53/02
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
B33Y70/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29K2009/06
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
C08L53/02
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
B29C64/118
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
C08L53/00
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C08L53/00
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
B33Y70/10
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
C08L53/02
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
B33Y70/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
C09D153/02
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
Abstract
A 3D-printable blend comprising a thermoplastic elastomer and a polymer. The thermoplastic elastomer is selected from poly(styrene-b-isobutylene-b-styrene) (SIBS), poly(St-b-butadiene-b-St) (SBS), poly(St-b-isoprene-b-St) (SIS), and their hydrogenated derivatives. The polymer is selected from polystyrene (PSt), poly(2,6-dimethyl-1,4-phenylene oxide) (PPO) and blends of PSt and PPO. The blends may be made into filaments suitable for use in the production of 3D printed articles.
Claims
1. A 3D-printable blend comprising a thermoplastic elastomer and a polymer; wherein the thermoplastic elastomer is selected from the group consisting of poly(styrene-b-isobutylene-b-styrene) (SIBS), poly(St-b-butadiene-b-St) (SBS), poly(St-b-isoprene-b-St) (SIS), and their hydrogenated derivatives and wherein the polymer is selected from the group consisting of polystyrene (PSt), poly(2,6-dimethyl-1,4-phenylene oxide) (PPO) and blends of PSt and PPO.
2. The 3D-printable blend of claim 1, wherein Shore A hardness, shear viscosity, thermal stability, storage modulus, and loss modulus of the blend are all increased as compared to a composition that contains one of the thermoplastic elastomers selected from the group consisting of SIBS, SBS, SIS, and their hydrogenated derivatives.
3. The 3D-printable blend of claim 1, wherein the polymer is PSt and wherein the 3D-printable blend contains between 20 and 50 wt. % of PSt.
4. The 3D-printable blend of claim 3, wherein the PSt has a molecular weight of between 1,200 and 192,000 g/mol.
5. The 3D-printable blend of claim 1, wherein the polymer is PPO and wherein the 3D-printable blend contains between 30 and 60 wt. % of PPO.
6. The 3D-printable blend of claim 5, wherein the PPO has a molecular weight of between 19,000 and 50,000 g/mol.
7. The 3D-printable blend of claim 1, wherein the blend is extruded into filaments.
8. A 3D-printable filament of the blend of claim 1.
9. A 3D-printed article made from a blend comprising a thermoplastic elastomer and a polymer; wherein the thermoplastic elastomer is selected from the group consisting of poly(styrene-b-isobutylene-b-styrene) (SIBS), poly(St-b-butadiene-b-St) (SBS), poly(St-b-isoprene-b-St) (SIS), and their hydrogenated derivatives and wherein the polymer is selected from the group consisting of polystyrene (PSt), poly(2,6-dimethyl-1,4-phenylene oxide) (PPO) and blends thereof.
10. The 3D-printed article of claim 7 produced by fused deposition modeling three-dimensional printing or by fused filament fabrication three-dimensional printing.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0018] For a more complete understanding of the features and advantages of the present invention, reference is now made to the detailed description of the invention along with the accompanying figures in which:
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF ILLUSTRATIVE EMBODIMENTS
[0057] The present invention relates to blends of TPE's with a second polymer such that the blend is then useable for 3D printing. In the present invention, the TPE is selected from the group consisting of poly(styrene-b-isobutylene-b-styrene) (SIBS), poly(St-b-butadiene-b-St) (SBS), poly(St-b-isoprene-b-St) (SIS), and their hydrogenated derivatives It will be appreciated that it is an important aspect of the present invention that SIBS, SBS, and SIS on their own, are not useable for 3D printing. While the bulk of the application will refer to the blend containing SIBS, any mention of SIBS also entails the use of SBS, SIS, or their hydrogenated derivatives in the place of SIBS.
[0058] Blends of the present invention have a superior modulus and harness as compared to SIBS on its own, which renders the blends of the present invention to be useable for 3D printing and leads to improved mechanical and thermal properties. It has also been discovered that the amount and molecular weight of the second polymer used for blending with the SIBS strongly affects the morphology of the blends, and which, at well-defined compositions, surprisingly exhibit a “salami” pattern that is characteristic of excellent 3D printability and signals the improved mechanical and thermal properties found in the blends of the present invention.
[0059] In one or more embodiments of the present invention, the second polymer is selected from the group consisting of polystyrene (PSt), poly(2,6-dimethyl-1,4-phenylene oxide) (PPO) and blends of the two. In one or more other embodiments, it will be appreciated that the second polymer can be any homopolymer that has the same chemical structure as the hard block in the thermoplastic elastomers used in the blend. In SIBS and SIS, the hard block is styrene, and thus, the homopolymer is polystyrene. It has been surprisingly found that the addition of homopolymer improves the hardness and modulus of such thermoplastic elastomers.
[0060] In one or more embodiments, the second polymer may be polystyrene (PSt). SIBS, having an average molecular weight of 65,000 g/mol, was blended with PSt with different molecular weights ranging from 1,200 to 192,000 g/mol. The weight percent of total PSt in the blends was varied from 20% to 50% and it was discovered that the inclusion of PSt increased the hardness (Shore A) of just SIBS alone of 43.7 up to 73.5 for a blend of SIBS/PSt, depending on the weight percent of the PSt.
[0061] SIBS/PSt blends with high MW PSt (192,000 g/mol) changed the morphology of the blend from scattered PSt domains in a SIBS matrix at 23 wt. % PSt, to a hierarchical salami morphology at 43 wt. % PSt. Desirably for 3D printing, the salami morphology of SIBS/PSt blends obtained when using a high PSt weight fraction leads to decreased shear viscosity of the melt, relative to SIBS/PSt blends using a lower PSt weight fraction. It was also discovered that SIBS/PSt blends have a higher thermal stability than pure SIBS. The maximum weight loss rate temperature increased by more than 10° C.
[0062] As stated above, SIBS on its own is not 3D printable, but the SIBS/PSt blends of the present invention were found to have exhibit excellent 3D printability compared with pure SIBS, and the printability was able to be tuned by the amount of PSt present in the blend (see Table 1). The mechanical properties of the 3D printed SIBS/PSt blends depend on the weight fraction of the PSt. The tensile strength and modulus increased with the amounts of PSt used, and elongation at break decreases with increasing PSt. It was also found that blends with higher MW PSt have better printability than lower MW PSt at the same weight fraction.
TABLE-US-00001 TABLE 1 SIBS/PSt blend compositions and properties Shear Viscosity Pa .Math. s PSt Shore A (at a 10 s.sup.−1 Sample (wt. %) Hardness rate) Printability* SIBS 0 43.7 563 No SIBS/PSt 23 50.5 1255 Unsuitable SIBS/PSt 33 58.3 1270 Good SIBS/PSt 43 73.5 1040 Excellent *Printability defined as successfully printing a 3D object with at least 5 mm of height or 300 layers without extrusion failure or visible defects.
[0063] In another embodiment, the second polymer is PPO. SIBS, having an average molecular weight of 65,000 g/mol, was blended with PPO with different molecular weights ranging from 19,000 to 50,000 g/mol. The weight percent of total PPO in the blends was varied from 30% to 60% and it was discovered that the inclusion of PPO increased the hardness (Shore A) of just SIBS alone of 43.7 up to 85.0 for a blend of SIBS/PPO, depending on the weight percent of the PPO.
[0064] The addition of PPO to SIBS produced substantial morphological changes. Large-are scans of SIBS/PPO (70/30) showed high surface roughness with large height variation. There were small spherical PPO-rich domains with heights of about 500 nm. In contrast, SIBS/PPO (60/40) and SIBS/PPO (50/50) showed relatively smooth surfaces. With increasing PPO content, the SIBS/PPO (30/70) showed rough surfaces with high-density spherical core-shell domains of about 7000 nm in a continuous matrix. High-resolution atomic-force microscopy (AFM) images were taken which showed that SIBS/PPO blends with PPO takin up between 30% and 50% of the blend, exhibited a two-phase co-continuous structure parallel to the substrate, which was in contrast to the vertical cylindrical structure of just SIBS on its own. When the PPO becomes the major component in the blend, the AFM images no longer showed a well-defined microphase separated morphology, but instead exhibited small spherical domains with phase-separated morphology within a homogenous PPO matrix.
[0065] As stated above, SIBS on its own is not 3D printable, but the SIBS/PPO blends of the present invention were found to have exhibit excellent 3D printability compared with pure SIBS, and the printability was able to be tuned by the amount of PPO present in the blend (see Table 2). The mechanical properties of the 3D printed SIBS/PPO blends depend on the weight fraction of the PSt. The tensile strength and modulus increased with the amounts of PPO used, and elongation at break decreases with increasing PPO.
TABLE-US-00002 TABLE 2 SIBS/PPO blend compositions and properties Shear Viscosity Pa .Math. s PPO Shore A (at a 20 s.sup.−1 Sample (wt. %) Hardness rate) Printability* SIBS 0 43.7 435 No SIBS/PPO 30 68 1326 Acceptable SIBS/PPO 40 78 1804 Good SIBS/PPO 50 85 2652 Acceptable SIBS/PPO 60 92 N/A** No *Printability defined as successfully printing a 3D object with at least 5 mm of height or 300 layers without extrusion failure or visible defects. **The shear viscosity of this sample was not measurable due to its high viscosity that blocked the capillary.
[0066] The molecular weight of the PPO was found to affect the morphology and physical properties of the SIBS/PPO blends. Relatively low molecular weight PPO was expected to be completely miscible with SIBS. The morphological changes of the SIBS/PPO blends using a PPO with a molecular weight of 19,000 g/mol when the PPO content increased were consistent with the SIBS/PPO blends using a PPO with a molecular weight of 50.000 g/mol when the PPO content increased. However, the 3D printability of the two different blends were not consistent, with the SIBS/PPO blends using a PPO with a molecular weight of 50,000 g/mol only being printable with a 30% to 50% r PPO content, and the SIBS/PPO blends using a PPO with a molecular weight of 19,000 g/mol only being printable with a 30% to 40% PPO content.
[0067] The mechanical properties of the blends were also affected by the molecular weight of the PPO, with Table 3 below summarizing the results. The SIBS/PPO blend that was 70/30 with a PPO having a molecular weight of 19,000 g/mol showed a higher modulus and a lower elongation at break than that of the SIBS/PPO blend that was 70/30 with a PPO having a molecular weight of 50,000 g/mol. Similarly, the SIBS/PPO blend that was 60/40 with a PPO having a molecular weight of 19,000 g/mol showed a higher modulus and a lower elongation at break than that of the SIBS/PPO blend that was 60/40 with a PPO having a molecular weight of 50,000 g/mol.
[0068] In another embodiment, the second polymer is a blend of PSt and PPO. Noryl® is a blend of PST and PPO with a strong combination of mechanical and thermal properties. SIBS/Noryl® blends containing 40 wt. % Noryl® were able to be extruded into thin filaments that were able to be used to FFF 3D printing.
[0069] It will further be appreciated that the 3D printability of thermoplastic elastomers can be enhanced, not only with the addition of a second polymer such as a homopolymer having the same chemical structure as the hard block in the thermoplastic elastomer, but can also be enhanced or improved when the blends are extruded into filaments. When provided as filaments, the mole fraction of the PSt in the SIBS copolymer may be between 20% and 50%. The filaments may have a diameter between 0.5 mm and 4 mm. The hardness of the filament materials may be between 45 and 95 (Shore A).
EXAMPLES
Experiment I—SIBS/PSt
[0070] Blending of Polymers and Fabrication of Filaments
[0071] The SIBS block copolymer was provided by Kaneka C. (MW—65,000 g/mol having 30 wt. % PSt blocks). The PSt homopolymer with a molecular weight of 192,000 g/mol was obtained from Sigma-Aldrich and the PSt homopolymers having a molecular weight of 45,000 g/mol and 1,200 g/mol were obtained from Scientific Polymer Products, Inc.
[0072] The SIBS and PSt were blended in various mass ratios, with SIBS being the major component (see TABLE 1 above); and wherein the lowest PSt wt. % was 23%, and the highest PSt wt. % was 43%. Blending was done in solution by dissolving both SIBS and PSt in toluene at a predetermined weight ratio. The solvent was evaporated to get solid SIBS/PSt blends, which were cut into small pieces and used as the feedstock for filament fabrication. Filament production was conducted using a Wellzoom B2 Desktop Filament extruder wherein the extrusion temperature was 180° C., and the diameter of the extrusion nozzle was 1.75 mm.
[0073] Morphological Studies
[0074] Pure SIBS exhibited overall uniform morphology with a typical hexagonal packed cylindrical microphase separated structure between the PSt and PIB blocks at the nanometer scale as shown in
[0075] By increasing the PSt weight fraction to 43%, unexpectedly, a unique hierarchical “salami” phase appeared as shown in
[0076] Hardness Testing
[0077] The hardness of a polymer is a defining criterion for its applicability in 3D printing. The hardness of the SIBS and SIBS/PSt blends was determined with a Shore A Digital hardness tester (Gain Express Holdings Ltd) according to ISO 868-1986). The samples for hardness tests were prepared by compression molding. Pure SIBS had a hardness of 43.7 (Shore A), which is too soft for 3D printing with conventional FDM printers. Blending SIBS with PSt increases the hardness. A shore A harness of 55 or higher is required for successful printing of SIBS/PSt blends. The hardness values for PIB/PSt blends with 23 wt. %, 33 wt. % and 43 wt. % PSt, were 50.5, 58.3, and 73.5, respectively.
[0078] Rheological Characterization
[0079] The melt viscosity (or flowability) of a polymer is another important parameter for FDM 3D printing. Melt viscosity is usually expressed by the melt flow index or shear viscosity. A relatively low shear viscosity is beneficial for FDM 3D printing because the melt can be extruded more easily. The rheological properties of SIBS and SIBS/PSt blends in the melt were studied using a capillary rheometer (Rosand RH 7). The shear viscosity of SIBS and SIBS/PSt blends was determined as a function of shear rate as shown in the graph of
[0080] The shear viscosity of SIBS and the SIBS/PSt blends at a shear rate of 10 s.sup.−1 (which is close to the condition when the polymer filament is extruded from the nozzle during FDM 3D printing) were measured and compared. Pure SIBS had a shear viscosity of 563 Pa-s (at 10 s.sup.−1 shear rate). This increased to 1255, and 1270 Pa-s for the SIBS/PSt blends with 23 and 33 wt. % PSt, respectively. The shear viscosity did not increase monotonically with the added amount of PSt: the SIBS/PSt (57/43%) blend exhibited a lower viscosity of 1040 Pa-s. This behavior is unexpected and is related to the salami morphology observed only for the SIBS/PSt (57/43%) blend.
[0081] Thermal Stability Testing
[0082] The thermal stability of pure SIBS and the SIBS/PSt blends of the present invention were studied by thermogravimetric analysis (TGA) (TA Instruments Q500). Compared with pure SIBS, the SIBS/PSt blends of the present invention have increased thermal stability as show in the graph of
[0083] Dynamic Mechanical Analysis
[0084] Dynamic Mechanical Analysis (DMA) was used to characterize the viscoelastic behavior of pure SIBS and the SIBS/PSt blends of the present invention as shown in
[0085] Use of Composition in 3D Printing
[0086] Filaments of the SIBS/PSt blends of the present invention were used for FDM 3D printing using a commercial 3D printer (Wanhao Duplicator i3) equipped with a modified printing head (Flexion Extruder). The nozzle diameter was 0.8 mm, the printing temperature was 230° C., the build plate temperature was 80° C., and the printing speed was varied from 2 to 20 mm/s. The printing head moved in the X, Y, and Z directions controlled by the software. The 3D models were built using Solidworks software. The printability of SIBS and SIBS/PSt blends was summarized above in Table 1. Printability was defined by the successful printing of a 3D structure with at least 5 mm in height or 300 printing layers without extrusion failure or large defects.
[0087] Pure SIBS could not be successfully printed. Unsuitable printing (i.e., as with SIBS/PSt 77/23%) indicated that printing could be completed, but with noticeable defects and high surface roughness. Good printability (i.e., as with SIBS/PSt 67/33%) indicated that the structure had a smooth surface and no visible defects. Excellent printability (i.e., as with SIBS/PSt 57/43%) indicated uniformity and smooth objects with high shape fidelity.
[0088] Tensile Testing
[0089] The filaments made from the SIBS/PSt blends of the present invention were 3D printed into dog-bone shaped samples for tensile tests according to ISO-37 (type 3) standard. The tests were conducted with Instron 4204 Tensile Tester. The SIBS/PSt (77/23%) sample had a tensile strength of 9.0 MPa, a modulus of 31.7 MPa and an elongation at break of 380% as shown in the graph of
[0090] The printing direction during 3D fabrication also had a strong effect on the mechanical properties of the printed objects. The SIBS/PSt (57/43%) blend was printed into three types of dog-bone shaped samples at a 0°, 450, and 90° printing directions, with respect to the long axis of the dog-bone shaped samples. The 0° printing direction sample had the highest tensile strength of 11.1 MPa and the lowest elongation at break of 276%, as shown in the graph of
[0091] Testing the Effect of the Molecular Weight of the PSt
[0092] The molecular weight of PSt was found to significantly affect the molecular architecture, printability, and mechanical properties of the SIBS/PSt blends of the present invention. AFM experiments were conducted on SIBS/PSt blends with PSt MW of 45,000 and 1,200 g/mol. Blends having 23 wt. % PSt with a molecular weight of 1,200 g/mol formed 0.3-2 μm irregular shaped aggregates in the SIBS matrix (
[0093] SIBS/PSt blends of the present invention utilizing PSt having a molecular weight of 45,000 g/mol, showed a uniform morphology, as shown in
[0094] The molecular weight of PSt also affected the printability of the SIBS/PSt blends of the present invention. Blends utilizing PSt with a higher molecular weight exhibited better printability than blends utilizing PSt with a lower molecular weight at the same weight fraction. Specifically, SIBS/PSt blends utilizing a PSt with a molecular weight of 192,000 g/mol had the best printability, followed by SIBS/PSt blends utilizing a PSt with a molecular weight of 45,000 g/mol, and SIBS/PSt blends utilizing a PSt with a molecular weight of 1,200 were the worst among the three.
[0095] Differences in printability were confirmed by morphological examination of the internal structure of the 3D printed objects. Scanning Electron Microscopy (SEM) images of cross-sections of 3D printed SIBS/PSt, with PSt molecular weights of 192,000, 45,000, and 1,200 g/mole, at 23 wt. % are shown in
Experiment II—SIBS/PPO
[0096] Blending of Polymers and Fabrication of Filaments
[0097] SIBS was provided by Kaneka Co. (molecular weight=75,500 g/mol, 30 wt. % PSt blocks) and the PPO was obtained from Scientific Polymer Products, Inc. (molecular weight=50,000 and 19,000 g/mol). Blending was conducted by dissolving both SIBS and PPO in toluene/chloroform (50/50 v/v), and the weight ratio of SIBS/PPO in the blends varied from 70/30 to 30/70. The solvents were then evaporated, and the solid SIBS/PPO blends were dried and cut into small pieces for filament fabrication. The filaments were prepared using a Wellzoom B2 Desktop Filament Extruder operated at an extrusion temperature of 180° C. with an extrusion nozzle 1.75 mm in diameter.
[0098] Morphological Studies
[0099] The morphology of the SIBS/PPO blends of the present invention were studied by AFM (Bruker Icon). SIBS exhibits an overall uniform morphology with a typical hexagonal packed cylindrical microphase-separated structure between the PSt and the PIB blocks at the nanometer scale as shown in
[0100] The high-resolution AFM images of
[0101] Hardness Testing
[0102] The hardness of a polymer is one of the defining criteria for the applicability for said polymer in 3D printing. The hardness of SIBS on its own and the SIBS/PPO blends of the present invention were determined with a Shore A Digital hardness tester (Gain Express Holdings, Ltd.) according to ISO 868-1986. SIBS on its own had a hardness of 43.7 (Shore A), which is too soft to be used in 3D printing, which requires a Shore A hardness of at least 55 and more preferably, 60 or higher. The 70/30 SIBS/PPO blend of the present invention had a Shore A hardness of 68, wherein the 60/40 SIBS/PPO blend of the present invention had a Shore A hardness of 78, and the 50/50 SIBS/PPO blend of the present invention had a Shore A hardness of 85.
[0103] Rheological Characterization
[0104] The melt viscosity or flowability of a polymer is another important aspect of a polymer being useful in 3D printing. Melt viscosity is usually expressed by the melt flow index or shear viscosity. A low shear viscosity is beneficial for 3D printing because this means that the melt can be extruded more easily. The rheological properties of SIBS on its own and the SIBS/PPO blends of the present invention were studied using a capillary rheometer (Rosand RH 7). The shear viscosity of SIBS on its own and the SIBS/PPO blends of the present invention were determined as a function of shear rate, as shown in
[0105] The shear viscosity of SIBS on its own and the SIBS/PPO blends of the present invention were measured and compared at a shear rate of 20 s.sup.−1 (a rate close to the shear rate of the nozzle in an extruder during FFF 3D printing). SIBS on its own had a shear viscosity of 435 Pa.Math.S; the 70/30 SIBS/PPO blend of the present invention had a shear viscosity of 1326 Pa.Math.S; the 60/40 SIBS/PPO blend of the present invention had a shear viscosity of 1804 Pa.Math.S; and the 50/50 SIBS/PPO blend of the present invention had a shear viscosity of 2652 Pa.Math.S. It was also determined that SIBS/PPO blends with 60 wt. % or above of PPO had too high a shear viscosity to be 3D printed. Therefore, the shear viscosity of SIBS/PPO blends of the present invention, at a 20 s.sup.−1 shear rate, needs to be below 3000 Pa.Math.S to be viable for 3D printing.
[0106] Thermal Stability
[0107] The thermal stability of SIBS on its own and the SIBS/PPO blends of the present invention were studied by thermogravimetric analysis (TGA) (TA Instruments Q500). PPO on its own has excellent thermal stability with a maximum weight loss rate temperature (T.sub.max) of 470° C. Compared with SIBS on its own, SIBS/PPO blends of the present invention have enhanced thermal stability as shown in
[0108] Dynamic Mechanical Analysis
[0109] Dynamic mechanical analysis (DMA) was used to characterize the viscoelastic behavior of SIBS on its own and the SIBS/PPO blends of the present invention. SIBS on its own showed two main transitions, a high temperature transition, corresponding to the glass transition (T.sub.g) of the PSt block at about 105° C., and a low temperature transition, which consisted of a shoulder at about 40° C. associated with the PIB block, and a prominent peak at about −15° C., likely due to a sub-Rouse type motion caused by relaxation at longer time scales.
[0110] Compared with SIBS on its own, the 60/40 SIBS/PPO (with PPO having a molecular weight of 50,000 g/mol) blend of the present invention has a higher storage modulus and loss modulus above −20° C. It also has a more pronounced peak associated with the PIB block at −40° C. The improved mechanical properties of the SIBS/PPO blends of the present invention are important for successful FFF 3D printing. The creep of the 60/40 SIBS/PPO (with PPO having a molecular weight of 50,000 g/mol) blend of the present invention were determined as shown in
[0111] 3D Printing
[0112] Filaments of SIBS/PPO blends of the present invention were used for FFF 3D printing using a commercial 3D printer (Wanhao Duplicator i3) equipped with a modified printing head (Flexion Extruder) with a 0.8 mm nozzle diameter. The printing was conducted at 250° C., with a build-plate temperature of 80° C., and a printing speed which was varied from 0.2 to 20 mm/s. The printing head moved in the X, Y, and Z directions. The 3D models were built using Solidworks software.
[0113] Table 2 above summarizes the printability of SIBS on its own and SIBS/PPO blends of the present invention. Printability is defined in this experiment of the present invention by the successful printing of a 3D object of at least 5 mm height and/or 40 printing layers without extrusion failure or large defects. SIBS on its own cannot be printed due to its softness. “Acceptable” printability indicates that the object was successfully printed, but the surface was rough with occasional defects. “Good” printability indicates that the object was successfully printed with high shape fidelity and the absence of defects. As stated above, blends with 60 wt. % of more PPO could not be printed due to high shear viscosity.
[0114] A printable SIBS/PPO blend of the present invention exhibited greater than 60 hardness (Shore A) and less than 3000 Pa.Math.s shear viscosity (at 20 s.sup.−1 shear rate). The internal structure (cross-sections) of 3D printed objects utilizing blends of the present invention were studied by SEM as shown at
[0115] Tensile Testing
[0116] SIBS/PPO blends of the present invention were formed into filaments and then 3d printed into dog-bone shapes for tensile testing by the ISO-37 (type 3) standard. Tests were conducted using an Instron 4204 Tensile Tester and the representative stress-strain curves are shown in the graph of
TABLE-US-00003 TABLE 3 Mechanical Properties by Tensile Testing of 3D printed SIBS/PPO blends PPO Molecular Tensile Weight Strength Elongation Modulus Sample (g/mol) (MPa) at Break (%) (MPa) SIBS/PPO 50,000 14.6 431 12.3 (70/30) SIBS/PPO 50,000 14.3 240 21.9 (60/40) SIBS/PPO 50,000 17.5 100 77.0 (50/50) SIBS/PPO 19,000 13.9 338 15.0 (70/30) SIBS/PPO 19,000 15.4 186 33.0 (60/40)
[0117] The Effect of the Molecular Weight of the PPO
[0118] The molecular weight of the PPO in the SIBS/PPO blends of the present invention affect the morphology and physical properties of said blends. Low molecular weight PPO is expected to be completely miscible with SIBS, and to evaluate this, PPO with a molecular weight of 19,000 g/mol were mixed with SIBS at different ratios and the morphology and properties were studied.
[0119] The morphological changes of the blends of SIBS/PPO using a PPO with a molecular weight of 19,000 g/mol (SIBS/PPO-19k) with increasing PPO content were consistent with the blends of SIBS/PPO using a PPO with a molecular weight of 50,000 g/mol (SIBS/PPO-50k). For instance, blends of 70/30 SIBS/PPO-19k showed a high density of spherical PPO-rich domains of about 500 nm within a microphase-separated matrix. Blends of 60/40 SIBS/PPO-19k and blends of 50/50 SIBS/PPO-19k were more homogeneous and their surfaces were smooth. By further increasing the PPO content, blends of 30/70 SIBS/PPO-19k showed spherical core-shell domains within the PPO matrix. High-resolution AFM images of SIBS/PPO-19k blends with 20-50 wt. % PPO showed two-phase co-continuous microphase-separated morphologies. However, 70/30 SIBS/PPO-19k blends exhibited small phase-separated domains scattered within the homopolymer matrix.
[0120] The molecular weight of the PPO also affects the 3D printability of the SIBS/PPO blends of the present invention. The SIBS/PPO blends of the present invention are printable with 30% to 50% of the PPO-50k, while the SIBS/PPO blends of the present invention are printable with 30% to 40% of the PPO-19k.
[0121] The molecular weight of the PPO also affects the mechanical properties of the SIBS/PPO blends of the present invention. The graph of
Experiment III—SIBS/Noryl® Blends
[0122] Noryl® is an engineered plastic of a blend of PSt and PPO with an outstanding combination of mechanical and thermal properties. As SIBS contains PSt blocks, the two materials were compatible. SIBS/Noryl® blends of the present invention containing 40 wt. % Noryl® were able to be extruded into thin filaments of 1.75 mm in diameter and said filaments were useful in 3D printing.
[0123] In light of the foregoing, it should be appreciated that the present invention significantly advances the art by providing a 3D printable thermoplastic blend that is structurally and functionally improved in a number of ways. For instance, it should now be evident how blends of thermoplastic elastomers and polymers can be used for the 3D printing of articles. Heretofore, thermoplastic elastomers were not readily 3D printable because of frequent extrusion failures (e.g., improper filament diameter, filament buckling, and annular backflow), poor interlayer adhesion, and insufficient object/bed adhesion. By blending polymers such as Pst and PPO with TPEs, improved TPE blends can be achieved that are 3D printable in the FDM and FFF 3D printing of soft 3D structures. It has been found that by the blends of the present invention can exhibit greater than 60 hardness (Shore A) and less than 3000 Pa-s shear viscosity (at 20 s-1 shear rate).
[0124] Although the present invention has been described in considerable detail with reference to certain embodiments, other embodiments are possible. Therefore, the spirit and scope of the appended claims should not be limited to the description of the embodiments contained herein. The scope of the invention shall be appreciated from the claims that follow.