Abstract
This paper presents an evaluation of two new approaches to improve the surface quality and the mechanical properties of ceramic parts printed by fused deposition of ceramic (FDC). Dip-coating and aerosol-treatment are performed in order to reduce the staircase effect in the vertical printing direction, which typically represents the weakest orientation in most additive manufacturing processes, particularly in fused filament fabrication (FFF). The post-treatments are applied on two highly filled alumina feedstocks. A commercial aerosol-treatment machine for fused deposition modeling is used with ethanol as solvent. A suspension composition for dip-coating is developed to reduce the surface roughness without compromising the printing resolution. The influence of these post-processing steps on the mechanical properties and surface roughness of the green and sintered parts is investigated using perthometer measurements and four-point bending tests in the vertical build direction on as-processed, aerosol-treated, and dip-coated samples. The mechanical results are compared to extruded strand samples. An improvement in surface quality is achievable by dip-coating despite reduction in the parts strength, with a reduction of 65% of the R(z) values in the sintered state compared to untreated samples. Aerosol-treatment neither improves the surface quality nor the mechanical properties of the parts. The feedstock and post-processing steps developed in this research aim at printing dense ceramic parts with high surface quality, serving as a basis for developing ceramic parts with higher strength. This advancement will facilitate the utilization of FDC in structural and aesthetic design applications.