Utilizing Textiles as Integrated Formwork for Additive Manufacturing with Concrete (2023-06)¶
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Contribution - Proceedings of the fib Symposium 2023, pp. 1285-1292
Abstract
Textile reinforced concrete (TRC) and additive manufacturing (AM) with concrete are two highly topical research areas which complement each other. TRC enables the construction of thin-walled, lightweight elements with high mechanical performance, such as shell structures. Additive manufacturing offers the possibility to economically fabricate components and buildings with complex shapes. In the current state of the art, 3D concrete printing of horizontally unsupported elements, such as overhangs or shells, is challenging, and so is the integration of reinforcement. In the work at hand, the authors present a combination of TRC and AM which allows for the production of reinforced shell-like structures using 3D concrete printing methods. The approach is to use a multilayered textile both as reinforcement and as integrated formwork. By fixing the textile in place on a few supporting points and printing concrete onto the resulting textile shape, shell like structures can be manufactured. The bottom layer of the textile is comparatively close-meshed, so that concrete can be printed onto it as a kind of shuttering. The upper layer of the textile is open-meshed and made of high performance fibers, allowing the printed concrete to penetrate through the textile layer which acts as reinforcement ofthe complete component.After presenting the approach, the suitability of different textile structures and manufacturing methods is analyzed including concrete printing technologies. Finally, the results of some experimental trials are presented.
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4 References
- Dittel Gözdem, Scheurer Martin, Dringenberg Steffen, Jitton Joaquin et al. (2021-11)
Digital Concrete Production with Vertical Textile Reinforcement - Mechtcherine Viktor, Mai (née Dressler) Inka, Empelmann Martin, Gehlen Christoph et al. (2021-09)
Digital Concrete Construction by Means of Additive Processes:
State of the Art and Research Needs - Mechtcherine Viktor, Michel Albert, Liebscher Marco, Schneider Kai et al. (2019-11)
Mineral-Impregnated Carbon-Fiber Composites as Novel Reinforcement for Concrete Construction:
Material and Automation Perspectives - Neef Tobias, Müller Steffen, Mechtcherine Viktor (2022-06)
Integration of Mineral Impregnated Carbon-Fiber (MCF) into Fine 3D Printed Concrete Filaments
BibTeX
@inproceedings{neef_ditt_sche_grie.2023.UTaIFfAMwC,
author = "Tobias Neef and Gözdem Dittel and Martin Scheurer and Thomas Gries and Viktor Mechtcherine",
title = "Utilizing Textiles as Integrated Formwork for Additive Manufacturing with Concrete",
doi = "10.1007/978-3-031-32519-9_130",
year = "2023",
volume = "349",
pages = "1285--1292",
booktitle = "Proceedings of the fib Symposium 2023: Building for the Future Durable, Sustainable, Resilient",
editor = "Alper Ilki and Derya Çavunt and Yavuz Selim Çavunt",
}
Formatted Citation
T. Neef, G. Dittel, M. Scheurer, T. Gries and V. Mechtcherine, “Utilizing Textiles as Integrated Formwork for Additive Manufacturing with Concrete”, in Proceedings of the fib Symposium 2023: Building for the Future Durable, Sustainable, Resilient, 2023, vol. 349, pp. 1285–1292. doi: 10.1007/978-3-031-32519-9_130.
Neef, Tobias, Gözdem Dittel, Martin Scheurer, Thomas Gries, and Viktor Mechtcherine. “Utilizing Textiles as Integrated Formwork for Additive Manufacturing with Concrete”. In Proceedings of the Fib Symposium 2023: Building for the Future Durable, Sustainable, Resilient, edited by Alper Ilki, Derya Çavunt, and Yavuz Selim Çavunt, 349:1285–92, 2023. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-32519-9_130.