2022 Annual Meeting
(351f) Versatile Additive Manufacturing of Microscale Metals and Alloys Via Hydrogel Infusion
Authors
We developed a general method for the fabrication of a wide variety of metals and alloys with complex shapes, mesoscale resolution, and overall cm-scale dimensions via DLP AM and subsequent post-processing and thermal treatment. This streamlined technique makes use of a single resin composition and a single set of processing conditions during the DLP process, followed by infusion of appropriate metal precursors into a hydrogel structure. Heat treatment in oxidizing followed by reducing atmospheres converts the polymer/precursor matrix into the target metal. Unlike previous vat photopolymerization strategies which have target materials or precursors incorporated into the resin during the printing process, this method does not require re-optimization of resins and resin curing parameters when the target material is changed; relevant process control parameters are shifted to the hydrogel infusion and heat treatment steps.
We report photoresin design and post-processing strategies to show how to use this technique to easily fabricate a range of AM metal and alloy structures. As a proof of concept, we fabricated octet lattice architectures with beam diameters on the order of 50 µm from several materials including copper, nickel, silver, cobalt, cupronickel alloys, tungsten, and multicomponent high entropy alloys. Furthermore, we demonstrate fabrication of multi-material metal structures via this method. Throughout, we investigate the relationship between processing and microstructure of these additively manufactured materials and highlight the wide-ranging versatility of achievable materials and microstructures.