3D Printed Lightweight Earth Fiber (2024-09)¶
, Akemah Tashania,
Journal Article - 3D Printing and Additive Manufacturing
Abstract
3D-printed earth materials that incorporate natural raw soils have been recently emerging due to their ecological and affordability potential. However, earth materials applications in additive manufacturing have been limited to thick mass assemblies with little to no fiber reinforcement. The addition of natural plant fibers within earth-based mixtures may advantageously increase ductility while allowing for lightweight assembly types, such as thin and perforated elements. This article presents a novel research development on natural, raw, and untreated earth-fiber compositions with maximized wheat straw fiber content for 3D-printed lightweight architectural tiling applications. Initiated with an experimental printability apparatus of a range of mix designs, a printable “light straw clay” mixture is defined through extrudability and buildability tests. Then, combining the digital craft of weaving with natural fibers for earthen lightweight artifacts, a geometric analysis explores potential super lightweight and structurally sound tessellations to allow for minimum material in the production of perforated panels. The third phase of the research included structural bending tests to assess the number of layers required for the final tile production. Finally, the resulting 3D-printed modular components were assembled to create a lightweight installation, hung and exhibited with an interplay of light and shade. By maximizing co-product vegetable fiber content within an earthen and bio-based paste, this research aims to increase the carbon storage capabilities of digital earth construction while enhancing its lightness and tensile possibilities. Learning from vernacular “recipes” of natural earth- and fiber-based construction, the developed paper-thin partition assemblage presented in this article contributes to wider possibilities of natural, nonconventional, and radically low-carbon material systems and geometries in digital fabrication.
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6 References
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Maximizing Fiber-Content in 3D Printed Earth Materials:
Printability, Mechanical, Thermal and Environmental Assessments - Dubois Vincent, Leblanc Alexandre, Carpentier Olivier, Alhaik Ghaith et al. (2018-01)
Performances of Flax Shive-Based Lightweight Composites with Rapid Hardening - Fratello Virginia, Rael Ronald (2020-05)
Innovating Materials for Large-Scale Additive Manufacturing:
Salt, Soil, Cement and Chardonnay - Gomaa Mohamed, Jabi Wassim, Veliz-Reyes Alejandro, Soebarto Veronica (2021-01)
3D Printing System for Earth-Based Construction:
Case Study of Cob - Rech Arianna, Chiujdea Ruxandra-Stefania, Colmo Claudia, Rossi Gabriella et al. (2022-11)
Waste-Based Biopolymer-Slurry for 3D Printing Targeting Construction Elements - Teixeira João, Schaefer Cecília, Rangel Bárbara, Maia Lino et al. (2022-11)
A Road Map to Find in 3D Printing a New Design Plasticity for Construction:
The State of Art
BibTeX
@article{carc_akem_alon.2024.3PLEF,
author = "Olga Beatrice Carcassi and Tashania Akemah and Lola ben Alon",
title = "3D Printed Lightweight Earth Fiber: From Tiles to Tessellations",
doi = "10.1089/3dp.2023.0341",
year = "2024",
journal = "3D Printing and Additive Manufacturing",
}
Formatted Citation
O. B. Carcassi, T. Akemah and L. ben Alon, “3D Printed Lightweight Earth Fiber: From Tiles to Tessellations”, 3D Printing and Additive Manufacturing, 2024, doi: 10.1089/3dp.2023.0341.
Carcassi, Olga Beatrice, Tashania Akemah, and Lola ben Alon. “3D Printed Lightweight Earth Fiber: From Tiles to Tessellations”. 3D Printing and Additive Manufacturing, 2024. https://doi.org/10.1089/3dp.2023.0341.