The impact of manufacturing parameters on submicron particle emissions from a desktop 3D printer in the perspective of emission reduction
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SinBerBEST Program, Berkeley Education Alliance for Research in Singapore, Singapore
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Publication type: Journal Article
Publication date: 2016-08-01
scimago Q1
wos Q1
SJR: 1.858
CiteScore: 14.3
Impact factor: 7.6
ISSN: 03601323, 1873684X
Environmental Engineering
Building and Construction
Civil and Structural Engineering
Geography, Planning and Development
Abstract
Multiple studies have been dedicated to particle emissions from three dimensional printer (3D printer). They collectively have shown that 3D printers will emit significant ultrafine particles during their printing processes. An important step forward is to investigate the printing process in detail and help reducing emissions. This study investigates particle emissions from two filaments of acrylonitrile butadiene styrene (ABS) and polylactic acid (PLA) according to four steps (loading, heating, printing, and unloading) during the 3D printing process in constraint of product quality assessment. The results show that ABS filament triggers at least times higher particle emissions than PLA filament (ABS-printed product presents higher quality with higher nozzle temperature (240 °C); however, higher nozzle temperature triggers substantially higher particle emission. This study further identifies that the particle emissions are mostly triggered by the heating process rather than the printing process. It indicates that filament undergoes decomposition during the heating period after being loading into the extruder. As for product quality in terms of surface roughness and production deformation, ABS is not compatible to fast neither printing speed nor low nozzle temperature; the PLA filament exhibits significant tolerance to temperature and feed rate changes. An optimization, which is externally heating up both the extruder and platform before the filament is loaded, shows that pre-heating reduces particle emissions by 75% for ABS filament when compared with the conventional procedure.
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Total citations:
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Citations from 2024:
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GOST
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Deng Y. et al. The impact of manufacturing parameters on submicron particle emissions from a desktop 3D printer in the perspective of emission reduction // Building and Environment. 2016. Vol. 104. pp. 311-319.
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Deng Y., CAO S., Chen A., Guo Y. The impact of manufacturing parameters on submicron particle emissions from a desktop 3D printer in the perspective of emission reduction // Building and Environment. 2016. Vol. 104. pp. 311-319.
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TY - JOUR
DO - 10.1016/j.buildenv.2016.05.021
UR - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.buildenv.2016.05.021
TI - The impact of manufacturing parameters on submicron particle emissions from a desktop 3D printer in the perspective of emission reduction
T2 - Building and Environment
AU - Deng, Yelin
AU - CAO, SHI-JIE
AU - Chen, Ailu
AU - Guo, Yan-song
PY - 2016
DA - 2016/08/01
PB - Elsevier
SP - 311-319
VL - 104
SN - 0360-1323
SN - 1873-684X
ER -
Cite this
BibTex (up to 50 authors)
Copy
@article{2016_Deng,
author = {Yelin Deng and SHI-JIE CAO and Ailu Chen and Yan-song Guo},
title = {The impact of manufacturing parameters on submicron particle emissions from a desktop 3D printer in the perspective of emission reduction},
journal = {Building and Environment},
year = {2016},
volume = {104},
publisher = {Elsevier},
month = {aug},
url = {https://doi.org/10.1016/j.buildenv.2016.05.021},
pages = {311--319},
doi = {10.1016/j.buildenv.2016.05.021}
}