- 3D printing
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For methods of applying a 2-D image on a 3-D surface, see Pad printing.For methods of printing 2-D parallax stereograms that seem 3-D to the eye, see lenticular printing and holography.
Part of a series on the History of printing Woodblock printing (200) Movable type (1040) Printing press (1454) Etching (ca. 1500) Mezzotint (1642) Aquatint (1768) Lithography (1796) Chromolithography (1837) Rotary press (1843) Offset printing (1875) Hectograph (19th century) Hot metal typesetting (1886) Mimeograph (1890) Screen printing (1907) Spirit duplicator (1923) Dye-sublimation (1957) Phototypesetting (1960s) Dot matrix printer (1964) Laser printing (1969) Thermal printing (ca. 1972) Inkjet printing (1976) Stereolithography (1986) Digital press (1993) 3D printing (ca. 2003) 3D printing is a form of additive manufacturing technology where a three dimensional object is created by laying down successive layers of material.[1] 3D printers are generally faster, more affordable, and easier to use than other additive manufacturing technologies. However, the term 3D printing is increasingly being used to describe all additive manufacturing processes. 3D printers offer product developers the ability to print parts and assemblies made of several materials with different mechanical and physical properties, often in a single build process. Advanced 3D printing technologies yield models that can serve as product prototypes.
Since 2003 there has been large growth in the sale of 3D printers. Additionally, the cost of 3D printers has declined.[2] The technology also finds use in the fields of jewelry, footwear, industrial design, architecture, engineering and construction (AEC), automotive, aerospace, dental and medical industries, education, geographic information systems, civil engineering, and many others.
Contents
Methods
A large number of competing technologies are available to do 3D printing. Their main differences are found in the way layers are built to create parts. Some methods use melting or softening material to produce the layers, e.g. selective laser sintering (SLS) and fused deposition modeling (FDM), while others lay liquid materials that are cured with different technologies. In the case of laminated object manufacturing, thin layers are cut to shape and joined together.
Each method has its advantages and drawbacks, and consequently some companies offer a choice between powder and polymer as the material from which the object emerges.[3] Generally, the main considerations are speed, cost of the printed prototype, cost of the 3D printer, choice and cost of materials and colour capabilities.[4]
“ Three-dimensional printing makes it as cheap to create single items as it is to produce thousands and thus undermines economies of scale. It may have as profound an impact on the world as the coming of the factory did....Just as nobody could have predicted the impact of the steam engine in 1750—or the printing press in 1450, or the transistor in 1950—it is impossible to foresee the long-term impact of 3D printing. But the technology is coming, and it is likely to disrupt every field it touches. ” —The Economist, in a February 10, 2011 leader[5]
One method of 3D printing consists of an inkjet printing system. The printer creates the model one layer at a time by spreading a layer of powder (plaster, or resins) and inkjet printing a binder in the cross-section of the part. The process is repeated until every layer is printed. This technology is the only one that allows for the printing of full colour prototypes. This method also allows overhangs.
In digital light processing (DLP), a vat of liquid polymer is exposed to light from a DLP projector under safelight conditions. The exposed liquid polymer hardens. The build plate then moves down in small increments and the liquid polymer is again exposed to light. The process repeats until the model is built. The liquid polymer is then drained from the vat, leaving the solid model. The ZBuilder Ultra is an example of a DLP rapid prototyping system.
Fused deposition modeling, a technology developed by Stratasys[6] that is used in traditional rapid prototyping, uses a nozzle to deposit molten polymer onto a support structure, layer by layer.
Another approach is selective fusing of print media in a granular bed. In this variation, the unfused media serves to support overhangs and thin walls in the part being produced, reducing the need for auxiliary temporary supports for the workpiece. Typically a laser is used to sinter the media and form the solid. Examples of this are selective laser sintering and direct metal laser sintering (DMLS) using metals.
Yet another approach uses a synthetic resin that is solidified using LEDs.[7]
Finally, ultra-small features may be made by the 3D microfabrication technique of 2-photon photopolymerization. In this approach, the desired 3D object is traced out in a block of gel by a focused laser. The gel is cured to a solid only in the places where the laser was focused, due to the nonlinear nature of photoexcitation, and then the remaining gel is washed away. Feature sizes of under 100 nm are easily produced, as well as complex structures such as moving and interlocked parts.[8]
Unlike stereolithography, inkjet 3D printing is optimized for speed, low cost, and ease-of-use, making it suitable for visualizing during the conceptual stages of engineering design through to early-stage functional testing. No toxic chemicals like those used in stereolithography are required, and minimal post printing finish work is needed; one need only to use the printer itself to blow off surrounding powder after the printing process. Bonded powder prints can be further strengthened by wax or thermoset polymer impregnation. FDM parts can be strengthened by wicking another metal into the part.
Resolution
Resolution is given in layer thickness and X-Y resolution in dpi. Typical layer thickness is around 100 micrometres (0.1 mm), although some machines such as the Objet Connex can print layers as thin as 16 micrometres.[9] X-Y resolution is comparable to that of laser printers. The particles (3D dots) are around 50 to 100 micrometres (0.05-0.1 mm) in diameter.
Applications
Standard applications include design visualization, prototyping/CAD, metal casting, architecture, education, geospatial, healthcare and entertainment/retail. Other applications would include reconstructing fossils in paleontology, replicating ancient and priceless artifacts in archaeology, reconstructing bones and body parts in forensic pathology and reconstructing heavily damaged evidence acquired from crime scene investigations.
More recently, the use of 3D printing technology for artistic expression has been suggested.[10] Artists have been using 3D printers in various ways.[11] During the 2011 London Design Festival, an installation, curated by Murray Moss and focused on 3D Printing, took place in the Victoria and Albert Museum (the V&A). The installation was called Industrial Revolution 2.0: How the Material World will Newly Materialise.[12]
3D printing technology is currently being studied by biotechnology firms and academia for possible use in tissue engineering applications where organs and body parts are built using inkjet techniques. Layers of living cells are deposited onto a gel medium and slowly built up to form three dimensional structures. Several terms have been used to refer to this field of research: organ printing, bio-printing, and computer-aided tissue engineering, among others.[13] 3D printing can produce a personalized hip replacement in one pass, with the ball permanently inside the socket, and even at current printing resolutions the unit will not require polishing.
The use of 3D scanning technologies allow the replication of real objects without the use of molding techniques, that in many cases can be more expensive, more difficult, or too invasive to be performed; particularly with precious or delicate cultural heritage artifacts[14] where the direct contact of the molding substances could harm the surface of the original object.
Industrial 3D printers
Industrial 3D printers are made by companies such as Objet Geometries, Stratasys, 3D Systems, EOS GmbH, and Z Corporation.[15]
Home 3D printers
There have been several, often related, efforts to develop 3D printers suitable for desktop use, and to make this technology available at price points affordable to many individual end-users. Much of this work was driven by and targeted to DIY/enthusiast/early adopter communities, with links to both the academic and hacker[16] communities.
RepRap is a project that aims to produce a FOSS 3D printer, whose full specifications are released under the GNU General Public License, that can copy some part of itself (the printed parts). As of November 2010, the RepRap can only print plastic parts. Research is under way to enable the device to print circuit boards too, as well as metal parts. The average price of a RepRap printer is about 400 euro (537 USD).
3D printer kits can also be obtained. Kits exist for Thing-O-Matic, Ultimaker, Shapercube, Mosaic, Prusa and Huxley 3D printers.[17] Prices of these printers vary from $700 to $1800.
The MakerBot is an open source 3D printer from MakerBot Industries.
Vendors and services
Some companies such as Shapeways, Sculpteo, Ponoko, i.materialise, and QuickForge offer an on-line 3D printing service which is open to both consumers and industry[18]. People upload their own 3D designs to the company website, designs are printed via industrial 3D printers and then shipped to the customer.[19]
See also
- Desktop manufacturing
- Digital fabricator
- Direct digital manufacturing
- List of emerging technologies
- Rapid manufacturing
- Self-replicating machine
- Solid freeform fabrication
- Additive Manufacturing File Format
References
- ^ See animation of layering
- ^ "Close-Up On Technology - 3D Printers Lead Growth of Rapid Prototyping - 08/04". Ptonline.com. http://www.ptonline.com/articles/200408cu3.html. Retrieved 2009-09-01.
- ^ "The World In 2008". Economist.com. 2007-11-15. http://www.economist.com/theworldin/displaystory.cfm?story_id=10105016. Retrieved 2009-09-01.
- ^ "Factors to Consider When Choosing a 3D Printer". http://wohlersassociates.com/NovDec05TCT3dp.htm. Retrieved 2009-09-01.
- ^ "Print me a Stradivarius". Leader. The Economist. February 10, 2011. http://www.economist.com/node/18114327?story_id=18114327. Retrieved 2011-02-15.
- ^ Chee Kai Chua; Kah Fai Leong, Chu Sing Lim (2003). Rapid Prototyping. World Scientific. p. 124. ISBN 978-981-238-117-0. http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=hpNT01xw4EEC&pg=PA124&dq=Stratasys&client=firefox-a. Retrieved 2008-10-31.
- ^ Printer using synthetic resin
- ^ "Cheaper avenue to 65 nm?". EETimes.com. http://www.eetimes.com/news/semi/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=198701422. Retrieved 2009-09-01.
- ^ http://www.ops-uk.com/3d-printers/objet-connex
- ^ "Wall Street Journal" (PDF). http://www.zcorp.com/documents/194_2007-1212-Wall%20Street%20Journal-3DP%20Turns%20Web%20World%20Real.pdf. Retrieved 2009-09-01.
- ^ Séquin, C. H. 2005. Rapid prototyping: a 3d visualization tool takes on sculpture and mathematical forms. Commun. ACM 48, 6 (June 2005), 66-73. [1]
- ^ Williams, Holly (28/08/2011). "Object lesson: How the world of decorative art is being revolutionised by 3D printing". The Independent. http://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/art/features/object-lesson-how-the-world-of-decorative-art-is-being-revolutionised-by-3d-printing-2342500.html. Retrieved 15 November 2011.
- ^ "ABC News: 'Organ Printing' Could Drastically Change Medicine". Abcnews.go.com. http://abcnews.go.com/Technology/story?id=1603783&page=1. Retrieved 2009-09-01.
- ^ Paolo Cignoni, Roberto Scopigno (June 2008), "Sampled 3D models for CH applications: A viable and enabling new medium or just a technological exercise?" (PDF), Association for Computing Machinery (ACM) Journal on Computing and Cultural Heritage 1 (1): 1, doi:10.1145/1367080.1367082, http://vcg.isti.cnr.it/Publications/2008/CS08/.
- ^ Kijk magazine 6/2011
- ^ http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=131644649
- ^ Kijk magazine 6/2011
- ^ http://www.wired.com/beyond_the_beyond/2011/06/spime-watch-dassault-systemes%E2%80%99-3dvia-and-sculpteo/
- ^ Vance, Ashlee (January 12, 2011). "The Wow Factor of 3-D Printing". New York Times. http://www.nytimes.com/2011/01/13/technology/personaltech/13basics.html?_r=1.
Further reading
- Easton, Thomas A. (November 2008). "The 3D Trainwreck: How 3D Printing Will Shake Up Manufacturing". Analog 128 (11): 50–63.
- Wright, Paul K. (2001). 21st Century manufacturing. New Jersey: Prentice-Hall Inc.
External links
- New Dimension 3D Printing Machines
- 3D Printing, The Next Napster?
- New York Times: 3-D Printing Spurs a Manufacturing Revolution
- Times Online article - Microtrends: 3D Printing
- 3D printer reshapes world of copying
- 3D Printing for the Masses
- 'Gadget printer' promises industrial revolution New Scientist
- A Factory on Your Desk
- 3D Printing: The Printed World from The Economist
- What is 3D printing? A beginners guide to the desktop factory
- EADS Airbike made of steel-strength nylon
Categories:- Printing processes
- Solid freeform fabrication
- Industrial design
- Emerging technologies
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