Thermal runaway when printing with copper infused PLA filament
 
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Thermal runaway when printing with copper infused PLA filament  

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Chance McCrance
(@chance-mccrance)
Active Member
Thermal runaway when printing with copper infused PLA filament

Hi everyone,

I have recently been experiencing a peculiar print issue on my Prusa when trying to print with DO3D Silk Copper PLA filament. First I would like to share a little bit about my background so you have an idea about my 3D printing experience. I bought the Original Prusa MK3S printer in early spring of 2019 as a kit and assembled it shortly thereafter. Initially I was doing very simple prints with just the PLA provided with the printer. After a about 4 or 5 months of this, I moved on to try printing with other Prusa PLA filaments. After about 8 months, I began printing with PETG (just the Prusament initially) and continued printing more complex parts. Since then I have branched out to try PETG filaments from other manufacturers, TPU, and even tried some PLA infused filament (wood initially). These were all successful. 

Recently my girlfriend bought me some DO3D Silk Copper PLA filament to use for printing some gifts for friends. The firmware on my Prusa is up to date with 3.9.2. I setup the print job in Cura using the Original Prusa MK3S printer profiles and set the material to PLA. Specifically the print temp was set to 220C, the bed was set to 60C and used the standard settings for everything else (for PLA that is) in Cura. When I tried printing the part, the first layer went down nicely, but after the 3rd or 4th layer I received a warning on the LCD screen notifying me of a Thermal Runaway. I'm not sure why this happened as I have never seen this issue in the past. I remember making sure to follow proper procedure when changing filament. Later I tried rerunning the print with the same temperatures, but using the Prusa PLA as the base settings for retraction distance, retraction speed, fan speed etc. Unfortunately I had the same results the second time. I'm not sure what is suddenly causing the thermal runaway issue as I have never seen it before and I have not made any recent changes to the hardware. I tried cleaning the hotend, but it didn't make a difference. 

Has anyone else printed with type of filament before on their Prusa? What were your results? Did you experience the issue I am seeing, and if so, did you find a workaround? Any insight about the thermal runaway issue would be helpful. I have a basic understanding of what triggers it, but I am not sure what about this particular print job would cause it to occur. Any help would be greatly appreciated. Maybe the copper based filament has greater thermal conductivity which is causing the hotend to lose heat faster than normal and it is making the heater work extra hard despite the thermistor not seeing expected temperature change. 

Postato : 12/12/2020 8:59 pm
bobstro
(@bobstro)
Illustrious Member
RE: Thermal runaway when printing with copper infused PLA filament

I don't have a lot of experience with the silk filaments, though I've got a couple of spools in my stack. I have read that they are thicker than normal filaments. 

It's also noteworthy that the first layer went down well but it threw the error at higher layers.

Things I'd check:

  1. Do a PID tune to calibrate temperatures. This helps with thermistor accuracy. If it's fluctuating, that might trigger the error. 
  2. Check your fan shroud alignment. Fan cooling is off for the first layer in most PLA profiles. If the fan is hitting the heater block when it kicks in at higher layers, that can cause it to cool despite being fed current to heat. Consider adding a silicone sock to shield the block from the fan and help stabilize temps.
  3. Try slowing down to 50% using the front knob. If the hotend can't melt this PLA as quickly as others, the filament could require more heat or more time to melt and extruder.
  4. Add a bit more (5-10C) heat. See 3 above.

 

My notes and disclaimers on 3D printing

and miscellaneous other tech projects
He is intelligent, but not experienced. His pattern indicates two dimensional thinking. -- Spock in Star Trek: The Wrath of Khan

Postato : 13/12/2020 2:42 am
Chance McCrance hanno apprezzato
Chance McCrance
(@chance-mccrance)
Active Member
Topic starter answered:
RE: Thermal runaway when printing with copper infused PLA filament

@bobstro

Thanks for getting back to me. Since adding this post I had the chance to look into the issue a bit further. It sounds like the thermal runaway is just a safety feature enabled through the firmware that prevents the heating element from continuing to ramp up unchecked if the thermistor isn't measuring the expected temperature changes within a certain time frame. It in essence, assumes there is an issue with the thermistor (or the heating element) and pauses the print to prevent hardware damage. Initially I was under the assumption that these infused filaments only had very small amounts of the infuse material and not enough cause any significant change in the overall material properties of the filament (at least not enough that it would require considerable adjustments in order for it to print). 

This assumption was clearly wrong. We know that copper has great thermal conductivity and is often added to printed circuit boards solely for the purpose of dissipating heat. As such, I had hypothesized that a lot of heat was being lost from the hot end through the filament itself causing the hot end to cool significantly more than it normally would during the printing process. Since I did not expect this affect to be so significant, I did not account for this when setting up the print job and had the fan enabled for full speed. The fan operating a full speed during parts of the print actually becomes overkill since the hot end is already being cooled by the filament itself. Hence why the heating element would try to work twice as hard to reach the set temperature and the thermistor not seeing the target value within the expected time range. 

To test the hypothesis, I setup the print job again and this time set the max fan speed to only 40%. The print worked perfectly after that. In a nutshell, the hotend loses a lot of extra heat because the filament has significantly more thermal conductivity than normal PLA and hotend fan at normal speed cools the metal too much making the heating element work harder to reach the temperature the thermistor is expecting to see..........hence causing the system to engage the thermal runaway error mode and pause the print. The moral of the story is to turn your fan speed very low or turn it off completely if you plan on printing with copper infused filament. 

Unfortunately I did not see your reply until after I had made this discovery for myself. Thank you for your support! I'll make sure to pay it forward or return the favor should the opportunity present itself. 

Postato : 13/12/2020 3:04 am
Peter in Katy
(@peter-in-katy)
Estimable Member
RE: Thermal runaway when printing with copper infused PLA filament

@chance-mccrance

I think you are a bit confused.

 

The copper portion of the filament is color, not material.  The filament is not infused with copper.  It is pigmented/dyed to have a copper appearance.  That's all.

Postato : 14/12/2020 2:20 am
Chance McCrance
(@chance-mccrance)
Active Member
Topic starter answered:
RE: Thermal runaway when printing with copper infused PLA filament

Regardless of what was added to the filament, it's pretty clear that the thermal conductivity is significantly different from that of standard PLA. I've printed many parts in PLA and never once encountered a thermal runaway issue or had to basically turn off the hotend cooling fan to get through a print. 

Copper infused PLA does exist. https://store.afinia.com/Specialty-PLA-Filament--Copper-infused_p_73.html

 

 

Postato : 14/12/2020 3:49 am
JoanTabb
(@joantabb)
Veteran Member Moderator
RE: Thermal runaway when printing with copper infused PLA filament

@peter-in-katy

copper coloured filaments meet your expectations, 

Copper FILLED filaments are a different case 

here is the produce description for  the Form Futura Metal Fill product

Product description

MetalFil-Classic Copper is an incredible new metal-filled PLA-based filament with approximately 80% of gravimetric copper filling. This incredible high filling with copper powders enables every FDM 3D printer user to 3D print copper objects which are almost indistinguishable from genuine copper. The extremely high copper filling in MetalFil-Classic Copper has resulted in an incredibly heavy filament with a density of 3.5 g/cc. Unlike other metal-filled filaments MetalFil-Classic Copper can be printed on full metal, PEEK, and PFTE hot ends and can perfectly be printed with 0.4mm nozzles. This makes MetalFil-Classic Copper basically perfectly suitable for all FDM 3D printers. You can even enable retraction settings on both direct drive extruders, as well as on Bowden style extruders, which is a truly unique feature for a metal-filled filament. Formfutura MetalFil-Classic Copper is a very easy to print material and ensures stable 3D printing results on basically all types of FDM 3D printers. This makes MetalFil-Classic Copper a perfectly suitable filament for beginners and intermediate 3D printing enthusiasts, whereas other metal-filled filaments are only suitable for experienced users. Please be aware that MetalFil filaments contain a very high concentration of metal powders, which have an abrasive nature. In general these metal powders will accelerate the nozzle-wear of brass nozzles, much faster than unfilled filaments. We recommend to use nozzles from stainless steel or other hardened alloys

 Here is an Amazon Link to the product.
https://www.amazon.co.uk/Formfutura-1-75mm-MetalFil-Classic-Filament/dp/B01IBMXNUC/ref=sr_1_6?dchild=1&keywords=copper+filled+pla+filament&qid=1607955371&sr=8-6

here is a link tot he manufacturers page 
https://www.formfutura.com/shop/product/metalfil-classic-copper-2821?category=459

I have used the copper fill filament to make a topical toilet roll holder, in the past... 

here is a picture of the second version, as I didn't take pictures of the first one

this is topically called the "BOG BULLET" and is a toilet roll holder, modelled on a scaled up 5.56mm Nato ( .223 ) bullet  there are currently three in existance, One at My rifle club, one at my Registered Firearms dealers and one at a friends house... 
Only one has the copper filled bullet section... the others are copper coloured

regards Joan

 

I try to make safe suggestions,You should understand the context and ensure you are happy that they are safe before attempting to apply my suggestions, what you do, is YOUR responsibility. Location Halifax UK

Postato : 14/12/2020 2:28 pm
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