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Comparative Effects of Carbon Fiber Reinforcement on Polypropylene and Polylactic Acid Composites in Fused Deposition Modeling

Research Authors
Alhassan Abdelhafeez Yasser Abdelrahman M-Emad S. Soliman Shemy M. Ahmed
Research Member
Research Date
Research Year
2025
Research Journal
JES
Research Publisher
Faculty of Engineering Assiut Univ.
Research Vol
53
Research Rank
Q4
Research_Pages
25-44
Research Abstract

This study offers a comparative evaluation of the impact of carbon fibre reinforcement on polypropylene (PP) and polylactic acid (PLA) matrices, focusing on their application in fused deposition modelling (FDM). Composite filaments with varying micro carbon fibre (MCF) contents were fabricated for both matrices, with their mechanical, moisture absorption, and morphological properties thoroughly characterized. In PP composites, MCF addition significantly improved tensile and flexural strengths, achieving optimal enhancement at 9.09 wt%, where tensile and flexural strengths rose by 75% and 100%, respectively, compared to pure PP. Conversely, PLA composites showed slight strength increases at lower MCF contents (below 5 wt %) but experienced strength reductions as fibre content exceeded this threshold. However, both materials exhibited increased stiffness (elastic modulus) with rising MCF levels, though PLA achieved optimal strength at a lower fibre loading. Moisture absorption increased in both matrices as fibre content rose; PP showed a proportional increase, whereas PLA displayed more pronounced absorption due to inter- and intra-filament porosities. Optical microscopy (OM) highlighted further differences: PP retained fibre distribution and bonding over a wide range of MCF levels, while PLA showed strong fibre adhesion and ductile fracture behaviour at lower MCF, shifting to brittle fracture and void formation at higher levels. Gaussian Process Regression (GPR) modelling corroborated these trends, identifying optimal MCF content as 9.09 wt% for PP and around 2.5 wt% for PLA. These findings provide guidance on selecting material and fibre loading for FDM applications, with each material achieving a unique balance of mechanical performance and moisture resistance.