TY - JOUR
T1 - Additive Manufacturing of PLA-Based Microwave Circuit-Analog Absorbers
AU - Prince, Theodore J.
AU - Riley, Elliot J.
AU - Miller, Simon W.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
IEEE
PY - 2021
Y1 - 2021
N2 - Fused filament fabrication (FFF) was used to additively manufacture (3-D print) two-prototype circuit-analog (CA) absorbers. The CA absorbers consist of a lossy frequency selective surface (FSS), substrate, and ground plane. In this article, the FSS and substrate were manufactured using two different FFF materials to make a cohesive structure manufactured during a single printing procedure. To design the CA absorbers, the complex permittivity of FFF printed polylactic acid (PLA), bronze-, brass-, copper-, and iron-powder infused PLAs, and a graphite-PLA composite was measured using a free-space materials measurement system. Out of the candidate materials measured, graphite PLA and standalone PLA were selected as the FSSs and substrates, respectively. Complex permittivity data from the selected materials were input to Computer Simulation Technology Microwave Studio so that a genetic algorithm could optimize absorber dimensions. Reflectivity of the printed absorbers was measured using a free-space measurement setup. Measured reflectivity data were compared to that from simulations. A simulated-geometric tolerance study corroborated differences noted between ideal models and measured data. The results showed that FFF techniques can be used for CA-absorber designs and that 3-D printing settings can ultimately affect absorber performance.
AB - Fused filament fabrication (FFF) was used to additively manufacture (3-D print) two-prototype circuit-analog (CA) absorbers. The CA absorbers consist of a lossy frequency selective surface (FSS), substrate, and ground plane. In this article, the FSS and substrate were manufactured using two different FFF materials to make a cohesive structure manufactured during a single printing procedure. To design the CA absorbers, the complex permittivity of FFF printed polylactic acid (PLA), bronze-, brass-, copper-, and iron-powder infused PLAs, and a graphite-PLA composite was measured using a free-space materials measurement system. Out of the candidate materials measured, graphite PLA and standalone PLA were selected as the FSSs and substrates, respectively. Complex permittivity data from the selected materials were input to Computer Simulation Technology Microwave Studio so that a genetic algorithm could optimize absorber dimensions. Reflectivity of the printed absorbers was measured using a free-space measurement setup. Measured reflectivity data were compared to that from simulations. A simulated-geometric tolerance study corroborated differences noted between ideal models and measured data. The results showed that FFF techniques can be used for CA-absorber designs and that 3-D printing settings can ultimately affect absorber performance.
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U2 - 10.1109/TEMC.2020.3044014
DO - 10.1109/TEMC.2020.3044014
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85099241797
SN - 0018-9375
JO - IEEE Transactions on Electromagnetic Compatibility
JF - IEEE Transactions on Electromagnetic Compatibility
ER -