3D-printable PVA-based inks filled with leather particle scraps for UV-assisted direct ink writing: Characterization and printability


Journal article


Luca Guida*^, Alessia Romani^, Davide Negri, Marco Cavallaro, Marinella Levi
Sustainable Materials and Technologies, vol. 44(e01335), 2025 Jul


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APA   Click to copy
Guida*^, L., Romani^, A., Negri, D., Cavallaro, M., & Levi, M. (2025). 3D-printable PVA-based inks filled with leather particle scraps for UV-assisted direct ink writing: Characterization and printability. Sustainable Materials and Technologies, 44(e01335). https://doi.org/10.1016/j.susmat.2025.e01335


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Guida*^, Luca, Alessia Romani^, Davide Negri, Marco Cavallaro, and Marinella Levi. “3D-Printable PVA-Based Inks Filled with Leather Particle Scraps for UV-Assisted Direct Ink Writing: Characterization and Printability.” Sustainable Materials and Technologies 44, no. e01335 (July 2025).


MLA   Click to copy
Guida*^, Luca, et al. “3D-Printable PVA-Based Inks Filled with Leather Particle Scraps for UV-Assisted Direct Ink Writing: Characterization and Printability.” Sustainable Materials and Technologies, vol. 44, no. e01335, July 2025, doi:10.1016/j.susmat.2025.e01335.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{luca2025a,
  title = {3D-printable PVA-based inks filled with leather particle scraps for UV-assisted direct ink writing: Characterization and printability},
  year = {2025},
  month = jul,
  issue = {e01335},
  journal = {Sustainable Materials and Technologies},
  volume = {44},
  doi = {10.1016/j.susmat.2025.e01335},
  author = {Guida*^, Luca and Romani^, Alessia and Negri, Davide and Cavallaro, Marco and Levi, Marinella},
  month_numeric = {7}
}

Abstract

Despite its significant environmental impacts, leather remains a popular material due to its durability, aesthetics, and mechanical properties. Recycling leather scraps is gaining increasing attention to reduce waste, pollutants, and emissions from pristine raw materials in the tanning industry. Material Extrusion additive manufacturing represents a promising way to recycle leather byproducts as secondary raw materials for new applications. This paper investigates the characterization and printability of photo- and thermal-curable PVA-based inks for UV-assisted Direct Ink Writing filled with leather filler scraps from the tanning industry, i.e., leather shavings. As a cold extrusion process, Direct Ink Writing reduces energy consumption and maximizes the waste percentage content in new material formulations. The morphology and thermal properties of the leather filler were assessed before adding it to a novel cross-linkable PVA-based matrix, preparing inks containing up to 20 % wt. of leather scraps, leading to almost 40 % wt. after post-curing. Rheological tests showed a shear-thinning behavior of the formulations and a clear transition from solid-like to fluid-like behavior, followed by a quick recovery of the solid-like behavior, ensuring good printability, shape retention, and fidelity. UV crosslinking and post-curing led to robust polymer networks, reaching crosslinking degrees of ∼90 %. According to the mechanical tests, the PVA-leather scrap inks exhibited mechanical properties broadly similar to virgin leather materials, i.e., 170 MPa elastic modulus, 13 % elongation at break, and 6 MPa stress at break. Scanning Electron Microscopy revealed a preferential alignment of the leather filler along the extrusion direction, confirming the reinforcing effect of the scrap particles. These results demonstrate the suitability of these inks as alternatives for new tailored applications in the leather industry, reducing virgin material usage through additive manufacturing. 1

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Keywords

Material extrusion (MEX) // Recycling // Polymer composites // Mechanical properties // Bio-based // Additive manufacturing


Highlights

  • Leather production has a significant environmental impact.
  • Leather scraps have been used to produce 3D printable polymer-leather composites.
  • Mechanical properties of the composite materials resemble the ones of original leather, allowing circular economy.
  • Direct Ink Writing allows for better mechanical properties.


  • 📑 Full text (publisher version) 2
  • 📝 Full text (preprint version) 3



  1. Guida, L., Romani, A., Negri, D., Cavallaro, M. and Levi, M., 2025. 3D-printable PVA-based inks filled with leather particle scraps for UV-assisted direct ink writing: Characterization and printability. Sustainable Materials and Technologies, Vol 44, e01335. DOI: 10.1016/j.susmat.2025.e01335

  2. Guida, L., Romani, A., Negri, D., Cavallaro, M. and Levi, M., 2025. 3D-printable PVA-based inks filled with leather particle scraps for UV-assisted direct ink writing: Characterization and printability. Sustainable Materials and Technologies, Vol 44, e01335. DOI: 10.1016/j.susmat.2025.e01335

  3. Guida, L., Romani, A., Negri, D., Cavallaro, M. and Levi, M., 2025. 3D-printable PVA-based inks filled with leather particle scraps for UV-assisted direct ink writing: Characterization and printability. Preprint. Available at SSRN. DOI: 10.2139/ssrn.5067553


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