Three-dimensional Printing of Complex Graphite Structures
Seyed Mohammad Sajadi, Shayan Enayat, L\'ivia V\'as\'arhelyi,, Alessandro Alabastri, Minghe Lou, Lucas M. Sassi, Alex Kutana, Sanjit, Bhowmick, Christian Durante, \'Akos Kukovecz, Anand B. Puthirath, Zolt\'an, K\'onya, Robert Vajtai, Peter Boul, Chandra Shekhar Tiwary

TL;DR
This paper introduces a room-temperature 3D printing method for complex graphite structures using a colloidal graphite ink with clay additives, enabling precise shape control and retaining excellent thermal, electrical, and mechanical properties.
Contribution
The study develops a novel graphite ink formulation with clay additives that allows 3D printing of complex geometries without heat treatment, expanding graphite applications.
Findings
Successful fabrication of complex graphite structures via 3D printing.
Printed structures exhibit high thermal, electrical, and mechanical performance.
Clay additive maintains properties without compromising material performance.
Abstract
Graphite, with many industrial applications, is one of the widely sought-after allotropes of carbon. The sp2 hybridized and thermodynamically stable form of carbon forms a layered structure with strong in-plane carbon bonds and weak inter-layer van der Waals bonding. Graphite is also a high-temperature ceramic, and shaping them into complex geometries is challenging, given its limited sintering behavior even at high temperatures. Although the geometric design of the graphite structure in many of the applications could dictate its precision performance, conventional synthesis methods for formulating complex geometric graphite shapes are limited due to the intrinsic brittleness and difficulties of high-temperature processing. Here, we report the development of colloidal graphite ink from commercial graphite powders with reproducible rheological behavior that allows the fabrication of any…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
