A facile
manufacturing method to enable the in situ foam 3D printing
of thermoplastic materials is reported. An expandable feedstock filament
was first made by incorporation of thermally expandable microspheres
(TEMs) in the filament during the extrusion process. The material
formulation and extrusion process were designed such that TEM expansion
was suppressed during filament fabrication. Polylactic acid (PLA)
was used as a model material, and filaments containing 2.0 wt % triethyl
citrate and 0.0–5.0 wt % TEM were fabricated. Expandable filaments
were then fed into a material extrusion additive manufacturing process
to enable the in situ foaming of microcellular structures during layer
deposition. The mesostructure, cellular morphology, thermal behavior,
and mechanical properties of the printed foams were investigated.
Repeatable foam prints with highly uniform cellular structures were
successfully achieved. The part density was reduced with an increase
in the TEM content, with a maximum reduction of 50% at 5.0 wt % TEM
content. It is also remarkable that the interbead gaps of mesostructure
vanished due to the local polymer expansion during in situ foaming.
The incorporation of TEM and plasticizer only slightly lowered the
critical temperatures of PLA, that is, glass-transition, melting,
and decomposition temperatures. Moreover, with the introduction of
foaming, the specific tensile strength and modulus decreased, whereas
the ductility and toughness increased severalfold. The results unveil
the feasibility of a novel additive manufacturing technology that
offers numerous opportunities toward the manufacturing of specially
designed structures including functionally graded foams for a variety
of applications.