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Controlling Porosity in 3D Printing with Activated Carbon

Controlling Porosity in 3D Printing with Activated Carbon

Written by David

August 22, 2019

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Researchers are getting even more in-depth with the study of materials and 3D printing with metal in the recently published, ‘ Activated Carbon in the Third Dimension—3D Printing of a Tuned Porous Carbon .’

 

Seeking to create hierarchically structured porous carbons, the team of scientists from Technische Universität Darmstadt experimented with SLA 3D printing to create a new form of mechanically stable structures.

 

Schematic overview of the 3D printing process, starting from the liquid photoresin, then producing a porous polymer open cell structure (tetragonal unit cell) by stereolithographic 3D print and subsequent extraction of the porogen phase, finally yielding an activated carbon open cell structure upon a thermal treatment consisting of stabilization in air, pyrolysis in nitrogen and activation in CO2. Usually obtained in the form of powder, carbons may be classic black, activated, or nanomaterial. Often though, conductivity levels in these types of powder are low—causing ohmic losses […]

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