THREE-DIMENSIONAL LOOP STRUCTURE BY ADDITIVE PRINTING
20210146634 · 2021-05-20
Inventors
Cpc classification
B33Y10/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B33Y80/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C64/10
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C64/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C64/40
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
D04B39/00
TEXTILES; PAPER
Y10T442/40
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
International classification
Abstract
A three-dimensional printing loop and method for manufacturing an object out of a set of three-dimensional printing loops is provided herein. The printing loop has a loop head, loop legs, and loop feet for connecting to adjacent loops within a wale. The printing loops in a first wale may be interconnected with printing loops in a second wale. The resulting object can be printed using a three-dimensional printer and have elastic properties based on the physical characteristics of the printed loops interlocked as provided herein.
Claims
1. A 3D printing loop comprising: a loop head, two loop legs descending from the loop head, and two loop feet descending from each loop leg.
2. The printing loop of claim 1, wherein each loop leg connects to an adjacent 3D printing loop.
3. The printing loop of claim 1, wherein the printing loop is formed of a material having a Shore A hardness of 85.
4. The printing loop of claim 1, wherein the printing loop has a thickness of 1 mm.
5. The printing loop of claim 1, wherein the printing loop has a thickness of 1.5 mm.
6. The printing loop of claim 1, wherein the printing loop has a thickness of 0.05 mm.
7. The printing loop of claim 1, wherein the printing loop has a loop width of 1.5 cm.
8. An object comprising a first wale of 3D printing loops and a second wale of 3D printing loops interlocked with the 3D printing loops of the first wale, each 3D printing loop comprising a loop head, two loop legs descending from the loop head, and two loop feet descending from each loop leg, wherein the head of a 3D printing loop in the second wale is interlocked with two legs of a 3D printing loop in the first wale.
9. The object of claim 8, wherein the printing loops are formed of a material having a Shore A hardness of 85.
10. The object of claim 8, wherein the printing loops have a thickness of 1 mm.
11. The object of claim 8, wherein the printing loops have a thickness of 1.5 mm.
12. The object of claim 8, wherein the printing loops have has a thickness of 0.05 mm.
13. The object of claim 8, wherein the printing loops have a loop width of 1.5 cm.
14. The object of claim 8 wherein the printing loops are not uniform in thickness.
15. The object of claim 8, wherein the printing loops are not uniform in loop height.
16. The object of claim 8, wherein the printing loops are not uniform in loop width.
17. A process for manufacturing an object using a 3D printer, comprising: additively printing a first 3D printing loop and a second 3D printing loop, each 3D printing loop comprising a loop head, two loop legs descending from the loop head, and two loop feet descending from each loop leg, wherein the head of the second 3D printing loop is interlocked with two legs of the first 3D printing loop, and further wherein the first 3D printing loop is connected to the second 3D printing loop by dissolvable material; and dissolving the dissolvable material.
Description
DESCRIPTION OF DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0013] Disclosed herein is a loop structure creatable by 3D printers having three axes of elongation or stretchability using a rigid or inflexible material.
[0014]
[0015] In some embodiments, the loop structure may be formed by additively printing a selected source material and a selected dissolvable material in a manner that forms the interlocking loops and feet in situ. The source material is used to print the loops 10. Each layer of loops 10 forms a 2D wale 20 of loops 10, which may be interconnected with the printed feet 16 and 18 of the wale 20 of loops 10 above it. The loop head 12 of each loop 10 in the lower wale 20 is interconnected with two loop feet 16 and 18 descending from the loops 10 in the wale 20 above it. During the printing process, the loop head 12 of the loops 10 in the lower wale 20 may be supported by a dissolvable material that connects the loop head 12 to the two feet 16 and 18 of the loop head 10 in the upper wale 20 through which the lower loop head 12 connects. Once the dissolvable material is dissolved after printing, each wale 20 of loops 10 becomes separate, allowing for limited motion between the loops and the layered wales and providing an extendable or stretchable layer.
[0016] Thus, the two front feet 16 and 18 of a given loop 10 in the upper wale 20 will each pass through a loop 10 of the lower wale 20 that is in front of that given loop 10. Similarly, the two back feet 16 and 18 of the given loop 10 in the upper wale 20 will each pass through separate loops 10 of the lower wale that are behind and to either side of the given loop 10. An example of two interconnected loops 10 shown in isolation is provided in
[0017] A loop 10 may further be defined by several parameters. The loop height is the distance from the top of the loop head to the bottom of the loop feet. The loop width is the distance from the end of one loop foot to an adjacent loop foot of the same loop along an x-axis. The loop depth is the distance from the end of one loop foot to an adjacent loop foot of the same loop in the y-axis, which is orthogonal to the x-axis. The foot length is the longitudinal length of each foot. The loop length is the total length of the printed loop material if laid out end to end. The loop length is equal to two times the loop height plus two times the loop leg lengths plus the length of the higher feet plus the length of the lower feet. The maximum elongation (i.e., stretchiness) of the resulting object created using this interlocking loop structure is correlated to the loop height; width, and depth. The maximum elongation percentage (%) along the x-axis is equal to the loop length minus the loop width, all divided by the loop width. The maximum elongation % on the y-axis is equal to the sum of the lengths of the higher feet and lower feet minus the loop depth, all divided by the loop depth. The maximum elongation % in the z-axis is equal to one-half of the loop length minus the loop height, all divided by the loop height. These equations are provided in algebraic form here:
Maximum elongation % on x-axis=(Loop Length−Loop Width)/Loop Width
Maximum elongation % on y-axis=((Length of higher feet+Length of lower feet)−Loop depth)/Loop depth
Maximum elongation % on z-axis=(½loop length−Loop height)/Loop height
[0018] Furthermore a longer loop leg length permits greater elongation, particularly in the z-axis (i.e., the axis running from head to feet). However, a longer loop leg length also requires additional dissolvable supporting material during printing to fill the larger volume of space between the loop legs. This increases printing time and cost.
[0019] The angles of the head, legs, and feet relative to a given axis may be designed to provide a “self-supporting” angle. In 3D printing, a self-supporting angle provides a structure that allows for the lower material to support the higher material during printing without the need for dissolvable supporting material to provide additional support during printing. If the angle is lower than the critical self-supporting angle, dissolvable supporting material is required to support the “overhanging” portion.
[0020] The loop thickness is the diameter of a cross-section of the loop head, i.e., the thickness of a single strand of printed material. The loop thickness is determined by the size of the nozzle of the printing machine. The loop thickness may be correlated to the maximum elongation percentage of the loops, and thereby also correlated to the maximum elongation percentage of the resulting object. For example, material having a Shore A hardness of 85 was tested for elongation percentage using the ASTM 5035 standard elongation test at a loop thickness of 1 mm and again at a loop thickness of 1.5 mm. The 1 mm loops had a maximum elongation percentage about 12% higher than the 1.5 mm loops. By means of such testing, a designer can select a particular material hardness and loop thickness and length to provide a desired maximum elongation percentage for the final produced object.
[0021] Some non-limiting exemplary embodiments of the printer loop are provided herein. In a first embodiment, an array of loops are manufactured together. Each loop has a thickness of 0.05 mm, and the array is approximately 2 centimeters square. Images of this embodiment are provided in
[0022] In a second embodiment, an array of loops having a loop width of 1.5 cm is provided, wherein the array has a width of approximately 25 centimeters. Images of this embodiment are provided in
[0023] The 3D printing loops disclosed herein provide technical solutions to problems in the prior art. For example, the 3D printing loop can be manufactured from a high-hardness, high-strength material while also permitting the resulting object to have higher tensile elongation than if the object were made solidly from the same material.
[0024] Furthermore, the multi-feet 3D printing loop provides tensile elongation in all three Cartesian directions for the object.
[0025] Furthermore, the maximum amount of elongation permissible in any given direction can be designed based on the geometric specifications of the 3D printing loop. This removes the problem of indeterminate elongation common in 2D knitted structures based on yarn.
[0026] Furthermore, the object can be formed of loops in variable sizes and thicknesses, thereby providing customizable elongation for specific parts of the object. This may be desired where elongation is preferable in some parts of the printed object but not in others.
[0027] Other benefits and embodiments may be realized by those of ordinary skill in the art without departing from the scope of this disclosure.