| Sumario: | Ceramic materials are gaining relevance in Additive Manufacturing (AM), although the lack of standardized process parameters limits the repeatability and comparability of printed parts. This study proposes an optimization procedure for the fabrication of alumina (Al₂O₃) components using Fused Deposition Modelling (FDM) with a ceramic polymer composite filament. The methodology was structured in two phases. First, the printing parameters related to extrusion conditions, speed profiles, layer configuration, and infill strategies were iteratively optimized using green parts. Then, the influence of chemical debinding and sintering was considered to refine the geometric parameters and scale factors necessary to ensure dimensional stability in final ceramic parts. The optimized parameter set was evaluated by fabricating standardized test artifacts according to ISO 52902:2023 to assess dimensional accuracy, resolution, and surface finish, and results were benchmarked against polylactic acid (PLA) printed under optimal conditions. The findings show that the proposed procedure enables reliable fabrication of alumina parts and provides objective performance data; however, dimensional deviations and surface artifacts increase after sintering due to material shrinkage and thermal deformation. The study recommends the adoption of structured parameter optimization workflows to support industrial integration of ceramic FDM and highlights the need for future work on optimizing debinding and sintering profiles to improve final part stability.
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