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Flexible Earth-Fiber Structures in 3D Printing

29 May 2024, Version 1
This content is an early or alternative research output and has not been peer-reviewed by Cambridge University Press at the time of posting.
This item is a response to a research question in Biotechnology Design
Q. How do we design with materials that have their own agency?

Abstract

3D printing has been shown to offer greater geometrical accuracy and production efficiency for textile and fabric-like structures. However, current 3D printed textiles have been exploring 3-dimensionality of lattice flexibility, mostly using petroleum-based material mixtures such as PLA (polylactic acid). Natural earth- and bio-based materials are minimally processed and use natural substances that may mitigate carbon intensities by reducing the amount of thermal and chemical processing. Specifically, with earth-based materials as an emerging research direction in additive manufacturing, deposited layers of material can create lattice objects. This paper presents a novel development that uses earth-fiber mix designs to create digital techniques for 3D printable flexible structures. Using a range of patterns and geometries, the 3D printed textiles were designed to exhibit a range of densities and patterns. Geometrical tectonics were applied using the mechanism of weaving (wefting and warping) to the different iterations that were created in this research. Material mix-designs were shown to heavily influence the resulting performance of the fabric. The findings demonstrate the capability of producing flexible soil-fiber flexible structures with characteristics akin to traditional knitted textiles, emphasizing promising prospects for further advancement and practical application of natural materials into architectural and wearable artifacts.

Keywords

bio-printing
soil-based fabrics
architectural applications
wearables

Supplementary materials

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Title
Supporting Figures for Flexible Earth-Fiber Structures in 3D Printing
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Images and Figures used in the paper.
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