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New high-performance thermoplastics drive 3D printed tools and parts

By Leslie Langnau | October 22, 2019

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Addressing the growing demands to deliver production-grade, custom 3D-printed tooling and parts, Stratasys unveiled several new durable, temperature and chemical resistant FDM thermoplastics. Meeting the specific requirements of 3D printed applications in manufacturing, these materials accommodate high temperatures and challenging requirements common on the production floor.

Materials introduced include:
–Antero 840CN03 for the Stratasys Fortus F900 3D printer,
–Diran 410MF07 and ABS-ESD7 for the Stratasys F370 3D printer.

Each of these thermoplastics is well-suited to handle the requirements of manufacturing applications in industries such as automotive and aerospace to engineer 3D printed jigs and fixtures, tooling, prototypes and production parts.

Developed for the F900 3D printer, Antero 840CN03 is the second PEKK-based polymer offered by Stratasys in its portfolio of proprietary Antero high-performance polymers – and leveraging the Kepstan PEKK technology from Stratasys strategic supplier Arkema. The new Antero material is formulated to create highly customized tooling and parts with consistent electrostatic discharge (ESD) performance, and fits printing high temperature- and chemical-resistant parts with ultra-low outgassing and excellent wear properties.

Suited for aerospace and industrial applications, the Antero material with ESD properties can create strong yet lightweight parts used in frames, panels and components. The material is also being added by Stratasys Direct Manufacturing, the company’s contract manufacturing division – as part of its material offerings.

“Manufacturing spacecraft poses intense material challenges in the development of parts that exhibit the right attributes,” said Brian Kaplun, Senior Manager for Advanced Manufacturing, Lockheed Martin Space. “One of those challenges is getting the right ESD or electrostatic dissipative properties, among other physical and mechanical characteristics. Stratasys Antero ESD fits our needs for outgassing and electrostatic dissipative properties in a strong but lightweight additive manufacturing material.”

The Diran material is built for durable tooling applications. It is a nylon-based material formulated by Stratasys and offered for the Stratasys F370 printer. This FDM thermoplastic gives manufacturers extreme toughness and low friction – combined with resistance to hydrocarbon-based chemicals and a smooth surface to offer low sliding resistance. Diran’s toughness withstands the rough handling of tools often common in a manufacturing setting.

The ABS-ESD7 thermoplastic, previously only available on the Stratasys Fortus printers, is built for static-sensitive applications to prevent discharge or attraction to other materials like powders, dust and fine particles. Extending factory floor materials to the Stratasys F370 3D printer, users can capitalize on prototyping and production requirements for low cost and highly customizable parts. Delivering an affordable, ESD-safe material on a platform dedicated to ease-of-use, repeatability and part accuracy, ABS-ESD7 suits manufacturing tooling applications.

“We see growing adoption of 3D printing in production environments, yet engineers and designers struggle with thermoplastics that just can’t match the extreme requirements of manufacturing-based applications,” said Adam Pawloski, Vice President of Manufacturing Solutions at Stratasys. “Our thermoplastics can remove these barriers to accelerate the adoption of 3D printing in manufacturing settings, allowing users to design and create faster while minimizing costs often associated with traditional approaches.”

Stratasys
www.stratasys.com

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