Additive Manufacturing of Fibrous Sound Absorbers
William Johnston, Bhisham Sharma

TL;DR
This paper explores additive manufacturing techniques for creating fibrous sound absorbers using fused deposition modeling, analyzing fiber characteristics and sound absorption performance through experiments and modeling.
Contribution
It introduces two novel 3D printing methods for fibers in sound absorbers and evaluates their effects on acoustical properties and fiber morphology.
Findings
Both methods produce fibers with aspect ratios over 100.
The fiber bridging method yields thicker fibers with higher sound absorption.
The extrude-and-pull method creates hair-like fibers suitable for surface enhancement.
Abstract
We investigate the possibility of additively manufacturing fibrous sound absorbers using fused deposition modeling. Two methods for 3D printing fibers are proposed. The fiber bridging method involves extruding the filament between two points with no underlying supports. The extrude-and-pull method involves extruding a filament droplet before pulling away the extruder rapidly to generate thin fibers. Both methods can produce fibers with aspect ratios greater than 100. Optical microscopy is used to investigate the effect of various printing parameters on the fiber characteristics. The sound absorption coefficient of samples printed using the two techniques are measured using a two-microphone normal incidence impedance tube setup. Effects of printing parameters and fiber density variables are experimentally studied. The experimental studies are supported by the Johnson-Champoux-Allard…
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