Analysis of the Integration of Carbon Fiber and 3D Printing Technology
Two Application Forms of Carbon Fiber in 3D Printing
1.Continuous Fiber Reinforced 3D Printing
✓ Technical Implementation: Uses a dual-nozzle printer; one nozzle extrudes thermoplastic (e.g., nylon, PETG) as the matrix, while the other lays continuous carbon fiber bundles as reinforcement layers.
✓ Structural Advantage: By alternately layering plastic and carbon fiber, a composite structure similar to “reinforced concrete” is formed. Component strength can exceed 1.5 times that of aluminum alloy.
2.Short-Cut Carbon Fiber Composite Filament Printing
✓Material Form: Carbon fibers are cut into short filaments (0.05–0.2 mm) and blended with plastic substrates (e.g., PLA, ABS) to form filaments.
✓ Performance Improvement: Compared to pure plastic, stiffness increases by 30–50%, weight decreases by 20%, while maintaining good print fluidity.

Breakthrough Applications in Aerospace
1. Existing Application Scenarios
Carbon Fiber Application Scenarios
| Application Type | Technical Solution | Benefits Comparison |
| Specialized Repair Tools| | Short-cut CF-nylon filament printing | Delivery time reduced from 4 weeks to 24 hours |
| Lightweight Brackets | Continuous fiber layup + resin curing | Weight reduced by 40% vs. aluminum parts |
| Prototype Components | SLS laser-sintered CF-nylon | Iteration cost reduced by 60% |
✓Certification Challenge: Aerospace-grade 3D-printed carbon fiber parts must pass NASA-standard fatigue tests (currently only a few companies qualify)
✓ Process Innovation: Boeing’s hybrid “3D-printed mold + traditional layup” process is used for 787 interior brackets.
Core Performance Advantages of Carbon Fiber
1. Mechanical Properties Comparison (Density: 1.7 g/cm³)
Carbon Fiber Mechanical Properties
| Materia | Tensile Strength | Elastic Modulus | Weight Ratio |
| Carbon Fiber | 5.5 GPa | 240 GPa | 1 |
| Aluminum Alloy | 0.57 GPa | 70 GPa | 2.4 |
| Steel | 0.8 GPa | 200 GPa | 5.6 |
2. Functional Advantages
✓High-Temperature Resistance: Heat deflection temperature >300°C, suitable for engine-adjacent components.
✓Fatigue Resistance: Strength degradation <5% under 1 million cyclic loads (vs. 15% for steel).
✓Design Freedom: Enables printing of topology-optimized structures (e.g., honeycomb cores, bionic skeletons).

3.Technology Development Trends
✓Material Innovation:
– Develop biodegradable resin-based CF to address aerospace waste disposal.
– Enhance fiber-matrix interfacial bonding via nano-coating technology.
✓Equipment Upgrades:
– Multi-nozzle collaborative printing (simultaneous processing of CF, metal powder, ceramic slurry).
– In-situ non-destructive inspection (real-time monitoring of fiber distribution uniformity).
✓Industry Standards:
– ASTM drafting F3301-23 *Certification Guide for 3D-Printed CF Aerospace Components*.
– Airbus plans to scale CF 3D-printed parts in A350 models by 2025.


