3D Printing Filaments

Image Part Number Description / PDF Quantity Rfq
PE1002TQ

PE1002TQ

Kimya

KIMYA TPC-91A 1.75MM 750G WHITE

25

PL1112OW

PL1112OW

Kimya

KIMYA PLA-R 1.75MM 750G GREY

25

PE1012TQ

PE1012TQ

Kimya

KIMYA TPC-91A 1.75MM 750G BLUE

25

PE2002TQ

PE2002TQ

Kimya

KIMYA TPC-91A 2.85MM 750G WHITE

25

PS1006TQ

PS1006TQ

Kimya

KIMYA ABS-ESD 1.75MM 500G OFF-WH

25

PE2010TQ

PE2010TQ

Kimya

KIMYA TPC-91A 2.85MM 750G OFF-WH

25

PE2014TQ

PE2014TQ

Kimya

KIMYA TPU-92A 2.85MM 750G BLUE

25

PE1010TQ

PE1010TQ

Kimya

KIMYA TPC-91A 1.75MM 750G OFF-WH

25

PE2004TQ

PE2004TQ

Kimya

KIMYA TPC-91A 2.85MM 750G BLACK

25

PL2069OW

PL2069OW

Kimya

KIMYA PLA-R 2.85MM 750G GREY

25

PT1001TQ

PT1001TQ

Kimya

KIMYA PETG CARBON 1.75MM 500G BL

24

PE1017TQ

PE1017TQ

Kimya

KIMYA TPU-92A 1.75MM 750G BLACK

24

PS2002TQ

PS2002TQ

Kimya

KIMYA ABS CARBON 2.85MM 500G BLA

25

PT1019TQ

PT1019TQ

Kimya

KIMYA PETG-S 1.75MM 750G CLEAR B

25

PS1011TQ

PS1011TQ

Kimya

KIMYA HIPS-R 1.75MM 500G LIGHT G

25

PL2075OW

PL2075OW

Kimya

KIMYA PLA-R 2.85MM 750G OFF-WHIT

25

PI1003TQ

PI1003TQ

Kimya

KIMYA PEI-9085 1.75MM 500G LIGHT

25

PE2008TQ

PE2008TQ

Kimya

KIMYA TPC-91A 2.85MM 750G RED

25

PL2072OW

PL2072OW

Kimya

KIMYA PLA-R 2.85MM 750G RED

25

PE1015TQ

PE1015TQ

Kimya

KIMYA TPU-92A 1.75MM 750G BLUE

25

3D Printing Filaments

1. Overview

3D printing filaments are thermoplastic materials used as feedstock in fused deposition modeling (FDM) and fused filament fabrication (FFF) 3D printers. These polymer-based materials melt at specific temperatures and solidify into complex geometries through layer-by-layer deposition. As core consumables in additive manufacturing, filaments enable rapid prototyping, small-batch production, and customized manufacturing across industries. Their material properties directly determine printed parts' mechanical strength, thermal resistance, and functional performance.

2. Major Types and Functional Classification

TypeFunctional CharacteristicsApplication Examples
PLA (Polylactic Acid)Biodegradable, low warping, 60-65 C heat resistancePrototyping, educational models, food packaging
ABS (Acrylonitrile Butadiene Styrene)High impact resistance, 100 C heat resistance, requires heated bedIndustrial enclosures, automotive parts
PETG (Polyethylene Terephthalate Glycol)Chemical resistance, food-safe, moderate flexibilityMechanical parts, medical devices
NylonHigh strength-to-weight ratio, abrasion resistanceGears, bearings, functional tools
TPU/TPE (Thermoplastic Polyurethane/Elastomer)Flexible (Shore 60A-95A), vibration dampingFootwear midsoles, protective cases
PC (Polycarbonate)Optical clarity, 110 C heat resistance, requires 260 C+ printingAerospace components, safety equipment

3. Structure and Composition

Typical 3D printing filaments feature a semi-crystalline or amorphous polymer matrix with diameter precision of 0.02mm (1.75mm or 2.85mm standards). Key structural elements include:

  • Base polymer resin (e.g., PLA, ABS)
  • Plasticizers for flexibility control
  • Stabilizers for thermal degradation resistance
  • Pigments for coloration (optional)
  • Fillers (glass/carbon fibers, minerals) for property enhancement

Advanced composite filaments incorporate 5-40% by weight of reinforcing materials like carbon nanotubes or metal powders.

4. Key Technical Specifications

ParameterImportanceTypical Range
Tensile StrengthDetermines load-bearing capacity20-100 MPa
Elongation at BreakIndicates ductility3-300%
Heat Deflection TemperatureThermal stability threshold50-150 C
Shrinkage RateAffects dimensional accuracy0.2-2.0%
Moisture AbsorptionImpacts print quality consistency0.1-1.5% @ 50% RH
Melt Flow IndexCorrelates with extrusion performance2-20 g/10min (190 C)

5. Application Fields

Primary industries utilizing filament-based 3D printing include:

  • Aerospace: Stratasys Fortus systems for UAV components
  • Healthcare: Formnext-certified medical guides using PEEK filaments
  • Automotive: BMW's customized jigs with carbon fiber-reinforced nylon
  • Consumer Goods: Nike's midsole prototypes with TPU materials
  • Education: STEM training using desktop FDM printers

Typical equipment: Prusa i3 MK3S, Creality Ender-3, industrial systems from 3D Systems and Materialise.

6. Leading Manufacturers and Products

ManufacturerRepresentative ProductKey Feature
StratasysAntero 800PEPEKK-based aerospace-grade material
3D VerkstanHT-PLAHeat-treated PLA with 120 C heat resistance
EssentiumFast TPU 80AHigh-speed printing (500mm/s) flexible filament
ArkemaSarten MetamorphHigh-temperature resistant PA11 for industrial applications
ColorFabbnGen FlexRecreus-branded engineering-grade TPE

7. Selection Recommendations

Key considerations for filament selection:

  • Mechanical requirements (static vs dynamic loading)
  • Environmental exposure (temperature, UV, chemicals)
  • Printer compatibility (nozzle temperature, enclosed chamber)
  • Cost-performance balance (standard vs premium materials)
  • Regulatory compliance (FDA, UL, REACH certifications)
  • Post-processing needs (annealing, vapor smoothing)

Case Study: Automotive ducting applications often select PETG for its balance of chemical resistance and formability versus nylon's superior wear resistance at higher cost.

8. Industry Trends

Market developments include:

  • Biodegradable composites (PLA/PHA blends) addressing sustainability
  • Conductive filaments (graphene-infused ABS) for EMI shielding
  • AI-driven material property prediction platforms
  • High-temperature polymers (PEEK, PEKK) for metal replacement
  • Recycling systems for industrial filament waste streams

According to SmarTech Analysis, the global filament market will reach $3.2B by 2027 with 18.4% CAGR, driven by production-grade materials adoption.

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