4.6 Article

3D-Printed Complex Microstructures with a Self-Sacrificial Structure Enabled by Grayscale Polymerization and Ultrasonic Treatment

Journal

ACS OMEGA
Volume 6, Issue 28, Pages 18281-18288

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsomega.1c02177

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Key-Area Research and Development Program of Guangdong Province [2020B090923003]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [52006056]
  3. Science and Technology Bureau Foundation of Changsha City [kh1904005]

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Complex three-dimensional microstructures are gaining more attention in various applications, but fabricating them with 3D printing techniques can be challenging due to the need for additional supporting structures. This study introduces a method for easily removing supporting structures by optimizing their size and grayscale value with ultrasonic treatment in ethanol solution. Experimental results and simulations show that stress concentration from ultrasonic vibration is key in the removal process, allowing for precise fabrication of complex microstructures.
Complex three-dimensional (3D) microstructures are attracting more and more attention in many applications such as microelectromechanical systems, biomedical engineering, new materials, new energy, environmental protection, and wearable electronics. However, fabricating complex 3D microstructures by 3D printing techniques, especially those with long suspended structures, needs to introduce additional supporting structures, which are difficult to be removed. Here, we propose a simple method in which the supporting structures can be easily removed by optimizing their size and the grayscale value working with ultrasonic treatment in ethanol solution. The 3D microstructures and the supporting structures made of the same insoluble materials are fabricated simultaneously by using a projection microstereolithography system with a dynamic mask. The results demonstrate that the supporting structures play a key role in the fabrication of the long suspended structures while they can be easily removed. The removal time decreases with the increase in the height of the supporting microstructures, and the breaking force and shearing force of the supporting structures increase with the increase in their grayscale and the diameter. In addition, theory and the multiphysics simulation validate that the stress concentration at the top and the bottom of the supporting structures due to the cavitation from ultrasonic vibration dominates the removal of the supporting structures. Finally, a tree-like structure is precisely fabricated by using our method. The present study provides a new way for the removal of the supporting structures for 3D printed suspended microstructures.

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