PVA is a water-soluble thermoplastic used primarily as support material in FDM printing. It dissolves cleanly in water, enabling complex geometries, internal channels, and delicate details that would be difficult or impossible with breakaway support.
PVA (Polyvinyl Alcohol) is a water-soluble thermoplastic widely used in FDM 3D printing as a dissolvable support material. Its key advantage is the ability to fully dissolve in water, allowing intricate part features such as internal channels, undercuts, thin structures, and complex overhangs to be produced with ease. PVA adheres well to common build materials such as PLA (and in some cases PETG or nylon blends, depending on formulation), making it effective for systems that rely on soluble support strategies. Once printing is complete, the support structure is removed by submerging the part in water, leaving a clean surface finish and preserving fine details without mechanical removal.
PVA itself is not typically used as a structural material due to its low mechanical strength and sensitivity to moisture, but as a soluble support it significantly expands the geometric freedom of FDM printing, making it valuable for engineering prototypes, functional assemblies, and complex hobbyist models alike.