Abstract
Additive manufacturing with polymers has been used mainly for prototyping. A recent development of Big Area Additive Manufacturing (BAAM) at 91做厙 has opened its applications in the mold and die industry. A numerical simulation and prediction for a mold heating performance requires accurate anisotropic thermal properties of the printed material, which are challenging to obtain, and often requires the use of multiple techniques. The transient plane source (TPS) technique has been widely used due to its ability to measure the thermal properties of an extensive range of materials (solids, liquids, powder). Despite the capability to characterize thermal conductivity k of isotropic and anisotropic materials, the measurements of latter materials are limited to the cases, where the samples have the same thermal conductivity k along x- and y-axis that form the radial plane. In this work, the method for a characterization of k in all three dimensions is developed, and the application of TPS is extended to the determination of thermal properties along the x-, y-, and z-axis individually. The materials are represented by additively manufactured polymers including polylactic acid (PLA) and styrene maleic anhydride (SMA). The developed method consists of (1) a determination of the heat capacity of the polymers by means of TPS in combination with the developed in this work data analysis procedure, (2) a machining three types of cylindrical samples from the same material, with the height corresponding either to x-, y-, or z-direction of printing, and (3) a determination of axial thermal conductivity employing anisotropic model and using previously determined heat capacity