Approaching Standardization: Mechanical Material Testing of Macroscopic Two‐Photon Polymerized Specimens
Abstract
Two-photon polymerization (2PP) is becoming increasingly established as additive manufacturing technology for microfabrication due to its high-resolution and the feasibility of generating complex parts. Until now, the high resolution of 2PP is also its bottleneck, as it limited throughput and therefore restricted the application to the production of microparts. Thus, mechanical properties of 2PP materials can only be characterized using nonstandardized specialized microtesting methods. Due to recent advances in 2PP technology, it is now possible to produce parts in the size of several millimeters to even centimeters, finally permitting the fabrication of macrosized testing specimens. Besides suitable hardware systems, 2PP materials exhibiting favorable mechanical properties that allow printing of up-scaled parts are strongly demanded. In this work, the up-scalability of three different photopolymers is investigated using a high-throughput 2PP system and low numerical aperture optics. Testing specimens in the cm-range are produced and tested with common or even standardized material testing methods available in conventionally equipped polymer testing labs. Examples of the characterization of mechanical, thermo-mechanical, and fracture properties of 2PP processed materials are shown. Additionally, aspects such as postprocessing and aging are investigated. This lays a foundation for future expansion of the 2PP technology to broader industrial application.
Copyright and License
© 2024 The Authors. Advanced Materials published by Wiley-VCH GmbH. This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Acknowledgement
F.C.-G. and M.L. contributed equally to this work. Veronika Biegler (TU Wien) is acknowledged for her support the preparation of UV-casted samples. Till Jarnot and Pablo Vazquez Conde (both UpNano GmbH) are acknowledged for their help with CAD design of the testing specimens. Peter Gruber and Josef Thalhammer (both UpNano GmbH) are gratefully acknowledged for fruitful discussions. This work was supported by the Vienna Business Agency (Grant No. 2864518). The authors acknowledge TU Wien Bibliothek for financial support through its Open Access Funding Programme.
Conflict of Interest
A.O. is a co-founder and CSO of UpNano GmbH, a TU Wien spin-off and the manufacturer of the NanoOne device used in parts of this study. A.O. is a co-inventor of a patent on a two-photon polymerization apparatus, which UpNano GmbH is licensing from TU Wien. M.L. is an employee of UpNano GmbH. The authors declare no other conflict of interest.
Data Availability
The data that support the findings of this study are available from the corresponding author upon reasonable request.
Files
Additional details
- ISSN
- 1521-4095
- Wirtschaftsagentur Wien
- 2864518
- TU Wien