TY - JOUR
T1 - Fresh Properties and Autonomous Deposition of Pseudoplastic Cementitious Mortars for Aerial Additive Manufacturing
AU - Dams, Barrie
AU - Chen, Binling
AU - Kaya, Yusuf Furkan
AU - Orr, Lachlan
AU - Kocer, Basaran Bahadir
AU - Shepherd, Paul
AU - Kovac, Mirko
AU - Ball, Richard J.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2013 IEEE.
PY - 2024
Y1 - 2024
N2 - Additive Manufacturing (AM) in relation to the construction industry is an emerging technology. However, ground-based AM on construction scales may be limited by the dimensions, reach and weight of the ground-based deposition platform. Aerial additive manufacturing (AAM) can revolutionise construction-based AM by employing multiple untethered unmanned aerial vehicles (UAV, known as 'drones') depositing material using miniature deposition devices. This study investigates aerial platform and cementitious material requirements for AAM and details development of structurally viable cementitious composite material with suitable rheological properties to demonstrate AAM as a novel aerial approach to complement ground-based activities. A synergistic combination of natural hydrophilic and partially synthetic hygroscopic polymeric hydrocolloids was developed in cementitious material to achieve optimal rheology properties in the fresh state. Analysis involved oscillation and flow tests, calorimetry, microscopy, computed tomography and mechanical tests. AAM application considerations focused on technical characteristics of UAV platforms, flight times, payloads and developed extrusion systems with optimal nozzle dimensions. Results demonstrate critical material parameters of 1700 kg/m3 density, 4° phase angle, 1.1 kPa yield stress, < 10 MPa complex modulus, and the ability to be processed through miniature deposition devices with 500 N force and 250 mA current. Material extrusions were realised using a custom-designed miniature deposition system which a UAV can carry and power. AAM will significantly impact automated construction by enabling new advances in aerial platform applications featuring multiple coordinated agents depositing bespoke material. This is particularly relevant to elevated or challenging construction conditions where an automated aerial approach can crucially reduce safety risks.
AB - Additive Manufacturing (AM) in relation to the construction industry is an emerging technology. However, ground-based AM on construction scales may be limited by the dimensions, reach and weight of the ground-based deposition platform. Aerial additive manufacturing (AAM) can revolutionise construction-based AM by employing multiple untethered unmanned aerial vehicles (UAV, known as 'drones') depositing material using miniature deposition devices. This study investigates aerial platform and cementitious material requirements for AAM and details development of structurally viable cementitious composite material with suitable rheological properties to demonstrate AAM as a novel aerial approach to complement ground-based activities. A synergistic combination of natural hydrophilic and partially synthetic hygroscopic polymeric hydrocolloids was developed in cementitious material to achieve optimal rheology properties in the fresh state. Analysis involved oscillation and flow tests, calorimetry, microscopy, computed tomography and mechanical tests. AAM application considerations focused on technical characteristics of UAV platforms, flight times, payloads and developed extrusion systems with optimal nozzle dimensions. Results demonstrate critical material parameters of 1700 kg/m3 density, 4° phase angle, 1.1 kPa yield stress, < 10 MPa complex modulus, and the ability to be processed through miniature deposition devices with 500 N force and 250 mA current. Material extrusions were realised using a custom-designed miniature deposition system which a UAV can carry and power. AAM will significantly impact automated construction by enabling new advances in aerial platform applications featuring multiple coordinated agents depositing bespoke material. This is particularly relevant to elevated or challenging construction conditions where an automated aerial approach can crucially reduce safety risks.
KW - 3D printing feasibility
KW - Aerial additive manufacturing
KW - pseudoplastic cementitious material
KW - rheology
KW - unmanned aerial vehicles
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85187339875&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1109/ACCESS.2024.3373188
DO - 10.1109/ACCESS.2024.3373188
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85187339875
SN - 2169-3536
VL - 12
SP - 34606
EP - 34631
JO - IEEE Access
JF - IEEE Access
ER -