AM15 


Additive Manufacturing and Composites


3D printing of magnets from highly concentrated, plate-like particle suspensions


October 24, 2019 (Thursday) 8:40


Track 1 / Room 305A

(Click on name to view author profile)

  1. Shen, Alan (University of Connecticut, Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering)
  2. Peng, Xiaoguang (University of Connecticut)
  3. Bailey, Callum (United Technologies Research Center)
  4. Dardona, Sameh (United Technologies Research Center)
  5. Chang, Shing-Yun (University of Connecticut, Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering)
  6. Ma, Anson (University of Connecticut)

(in printed abstract book)
Alan Shen1, Xiaoguang Peng1, Callum Bailey2, Sameh Dardona2, Shing-Yun Chang3, and Anson Ma1
1Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering, University of Connecticut, Storrs, CT 06269; 2United Technologies Research Center, East Hartford, CT 06108; 3Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering, University of Connecticut, Storrs, CT 06269


Chang, Shing-Yun


A new additive manufacturing method coined "UV-assisted direct write"(UADW) has been developed to produce magnets of arbitrary shapes at room temperature [Additive Manufacturing, 22, 343-350 (2018)]. The UADW method involves mixing magnetic particles with a photo-curable binder to create an ink, which is then extruded through a nozzle and deposited onto a substrate. In this presentation, we will describe how the particle loading and consequently the magnetic strength of 3D printed magnets be maximized through understanding and controlling the rheology of highly concentrated suspensions of plate-like magnetic particles.