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Experimental study of the deformation and breakage of 3D printed agglomerates: effects of packing density and inter-particle bond strength

journal contribution
posted on 2018-12-01, 00:00 authored by R Ge, M Ghadiri, T Bonakdar, Z Zhou, I Larson, Karen HapgoodKaren Hapgood
© 2018 Elsevier B.V. Characterization of the mechanical properties of agglomerates is important in order to understand their deformation and breakage. However, research progress has been hampered by limitations in our ability to manufacture reproducible agglomerates with well-controlled and fully characterised mechanical properties. In this paper, we report on the preparation and testing of agglomerates with tuneable properties using 3D printing technology. Two typical agglomerate structures with different packing densities were designed and printed using a PolyJet 3D printer. Each agglomerate consisted of rigid primary particles connected by either rigid or rubber-like inter-particle cylindrical bonds. Compression tests (using speeds in the range 0.02–0.5 mm/s) and drop weight impact tests were carried out to investigate the effect of bond material and strain rate on mechanical properties of the agglomerates. The results show that strain rate affects their deformation and breakage significantly, and breakage patterns of the two structures are different under uniaxial compression and impact test conditions. These results demonstrate the broad utility of 3D printed agglomerates as ideal “test” agglomerates for a range of breakage studies, including validating computer simulations of DEM breakage.

History

Journal

Powder technology

Volume

340

Pagination

299 - 310

Publisher

Elsevier

Location

Amsterdam, The Netherlands

ISSN

0032-5910

eISSN

1873-328X

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2018, Elsevier B.V.