English: Access to vacuum systems is limited because of economic costs. A rapidly growing approach to reduce costs of scientific equipment is to combine open source hardware methods with digital distributed manufacturing with 3D printers. Although high-end 3D printers can manufacturer vacuum components, again access to tooling is economically prohibitive. Low-cost material extrusion 3D printing with plastic overcomes cost issue, but two problems arise when attempting to use plastic in or as part of vacuum systems: the out gassing of polymers and their sealing. To over-come these challenges, this study explores the potential of using post processing heat treatments to seal 3D printed polypropylene for use in vacuum environments. The effect of infill overlap and heat treatment with a readily-available heat gun on 3D printed PP parts was investigated in detail on ISO-standardized KF vacuum fitting parts and computer vision-based monitoring of vacuum pump down velocities. The results showed that infill overlap and heat treating both had a large impact on the vacuum pressures obtainable with 3D printed parts. Heat treatment combined with 98% infill reliably sealed parts for use in vacuum systems, which makes the use of low-cost desk-top 3D printers capable of manufacturing vacuum components for open scientific hardware.
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Uploaded a work by Pierce J. Mayville, Aliaksei L. Petsiuk, Joshua M. Pearce from https://www.appropedia.org/Thermal_Post-Processing_of_3-D_Printed_Polypropylene_Parts_for_Vacuum_Systems with UploadWizard
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