Additive Manufacturing

3D Printed Ceramics - a Hot Topic for Many

TA&T-logo3.jpg

(photo credit:  TA&T)

Last night, I attended a presentation sponsored by 3D Maryland on 3D Printed Ceramics. Walter Zimbeck and Todd Heil from Technology Assessment & Transfer, Inc. spoke about their company's innovative additive manufacturing and R&D capabilities.  Before the workshop started, I overheard them talking about a co-worker's pottery class she's taking... What an ironic twist, someone working with both the oldest and newest techniques of ceramic production.

TA&T's mission is "Bridging the Gap Between Technology and the Marketplace."  Like many firms in the area, they work a lot with the government and universities to create and commercialize new materials and processes.  Given the interest in 3D printing components that can withstand extreme heat, many of their successful projects have focused on ceramic materials using a proprietary process called Ceramic Stereolithograpy (CS).  According to their website, CS uses

photo-curable resin filled with a high loading of ceramic powder to produce ceramic parts... Through digital manufacturing, hundreds of complex shapes can be manufactured simultaneously.

Based on their experiences, CS is definitely a harder process to master than its description implies, and given the end use of their products, one left to the experts...

Todd Heil is a Senior Engineer at Technology Assessment & Transfer, Inc. (TA&T) who holds a Materials Science PhD from Virginia Tech.

Walter Zimbeck manages TA&T's 3D Printing group. He has an MS in Electrical Engineering from UC Santa Barbara.

Skill Gap Recognized as Challenge to Additive Manufacturing

BY THE NUMBERS

17.4 million: Jobs supported by manufacturing in the United States

12: The percentage of manufacturing in the nation's GDP

$77,000: The average salary of manufacturing workers

$60,000: The average salary of entry-level manufacturing engineers

17: The percent of Americans who view manufacturing as a viable career choice

Source: National Institute of Standards and Technology, courtesy of Orange Count Register

My parents and brothers own a small box-making plant in Pittsburgh. When I was young, we would play in the scrap piles, sweep the floors, and do odd jobs to pass the time while our parents worked.  Because of this unique experience - and because Pittsburgh was a major steel producer - I knew that manufacturing was a good career choice - if you could get the work.  Unfortunately, it earned a bad reputation in the 70s, 80s, and 90s as more companies offshored and consolidated their production facilities.  I myself left the field to teach when I had to oversee Nabisco's Pittsburgh plant closing.

This experience is one reason I'm very excited about Additive Manufacturing (3D printing).  It uses advanced technology, requires high-skilled labor and conserves raw materials... things I hope will attract another generation of U.S. makers... but first, this generation will need to learn the skills required to design, scan and make 3D printed prototypes, parts, tools and models. Increasingly, schools, like some in Orange County, recognize the importance of ensuring enough workers have those skills.

According to Orange County Register reporter Tomoya Shamira, the Dean of the UC Irvine School of Engineering Dr. George Washington describes his students' experiences,

"Students at UCI receive training in a host of additive manufacturing technologies such as selective laser sintering and stereolithography."  

And this is fueling an interest in manufacturing... 

"CI engineering professor Marc Madou said 3D printing is helping young people become interested in manufacturing, partly because they can turn their design into a physical model quickly."

But not all jobs will require an engineering degree which highlights the need to partner with local community colleges as well...

"While advanced technologies are changing the manufacturing landscape, there’s growing demand for experienced welders and machinists as U.S. companies are bringing their manufacturing back home. Two-thirds of manufacturers said they couldn’t find qualified workers, according to a survey conducted by the Manufacturing Institute and Deloitte Consulting."

 

3D Printed Bricks Designed to Stand Up to Earthquakes

Photo Credit: Inside 3DP

Photo Credit: Inside 3DP

When I first moved to the Pacific North West, one of the first things I noticed was the lack of brick-based architecture - an obvious nod to life in an Earthquake zone.  But that could someday change... 

According to Inside 3DP, "one California-based architecture firm, Emerging Objects, ...(has) gone back to basics and reinvented the humble brick to create the Quake Column. This appropriately named pillar is manufactured from 3D printed bricks, made from sand using the ancient art of Incan masonry.

Not only can it withstand earthquakes, but the bricks require no cement or mortar to hold them together. This is due to the design of the bricks which interlock, rather like a secure 3D puzzle. Once the bricks have been assembled, they then become earthquake proof as they do not allow any kind of horizontal movement."

Other advantages cited:

  • The printed bricks can be marked in a way that ensures accurate assembly even by untrained laborers
  • They are hollow but strong, reducing material use and product weight

And if they are made from readily available raw materials, one would hope that the cost to produce them would be low, perhaps much like the 3D printed mud homes being proposed by WASP.

 

 

3D Printing Lets Visitors Enjoy Ancient Ruins Without Ruining Them

Image Credit:  3dprintingindustry.com

Image Credit:  3dprintingindustry.com

Weeks before the Egyptian Revolution, I had the opportunity of a lifetime to visit Cairo.  When I visited the pyramids, I was shocked to see so many people climbing all over them.  I had imagined we wouldn't be allowed to touch, let alone scale, something so ancient and valuable.  

Such access has taken a toll on another Egyptian site:  the burial chamber of the Pharaoh Tutankhamun.  

"It was the constant changes, caused by the humidity of the breath and temperature of the visitors that had started to make the paint on the walls crack, and the plaster to fail.

It was decided that if something wasn't done, the chamber would deteriorate to the point where valuable artifacts would be lost."

Fortunately, 3D printing has come to its rescue.  A Spanish-based 3D printing company undertook a five-year project to thoroughly 3D scan the tomb's interior and 3D print an exact replica.

Perhaps one of the most extensive examples of using additive manufacturing to preserve history, the Egyptian project is just one of many such efforts.  For years, the Smithsonian Institution has also been scanning and printing a number of its artifacts:  Smithsonian X 3D allows individuals to remotely "navigate, explore and manipulate 3D collection objects"  And other museums have begun to reproduce valuables to make exhibits more interactive and accessible.

Can 3-D Printing be Hazardous to Your Health?

The following is an excerpt from Valerie Brown's recent article on the potential health effects associated with 3D printing...  maybe one reason to leave the printing to professionals?

3-D Printing Is Getting Huge Hype, But It Could Be One Massive Health Risk

A study found the machines can emit high levels of ultrafine particles whose biological behavior and health effects are unknown.

September 23, 2014  |  

3-D printers can use a variety of raw materials, ranging from thermoplastics to metal and ceramic powders. Design-obsessed chefs will love the countertop model that can print any desired shape in sugar or chocolate.

Like the personal computer and the cell phone, 3-D printing appears to be irresistible. But the temptation to exploit the technology may lead enthusiasts to disregard important information. For example, a recent study found that desktop machines can emit extremely high levels of ultrafine particles (UFPs), also called nanoparticles (less than 100 nanometers, in the size range of viruses). The specific biological behavior and health effects of these particles are largely unknown, but other research on UFPs suggests caution.

Evaluating the safety of UFPs “should be of highest priority given their expected worldwide distribution for industrial applications and the likelihood of human exposure, directly or through release into the environment,” wrote Gunter Oberdörster, a professor in the Department of Environmental Medicine at the University of Rochester Medical Center School, in a 2005 reviewof nanotoxicology and UFPs.

The most common feedstocks are plant-based polylactic acid (PLA) and petroleum-derived acrylonitrile-butadiene-styrene (ABS). These come in spools of filament that are threaded into the machine and then melted and extruded out a nozzle that moves back and forth across a base. The whole contraption looks like a more complicated version of the machines that will etch your dog’s name onto a bone-shaped piece of stainless steel at the pet supply store. Free software is available to create a digital file that tells the printer what to do.

The temperatures necessary to melt 3-D feedstocks vary. PLA filament must be heated to around 350 degrees Fahrenheit, whereas ABS has to reach about 500 degrees. Whatever gases and UFPs are released during printing will come out into the ambient air unless the machine is attached to a ventilating and/or filtration system. Most inexpensive printers do not even have enclosures around the print surface.

Users describe the smells of printer operation in different ways. Shashi Jain, who organized a 3-D printer group in Portland, Oregon, says the ABS filament smells like a hot burner on an electric stove. The makers of the 3Doodler, a hand-held pen, assure potential customers that the smell of ABS is “less noxious than a permanent marker” and that PLA smells like corn.

These statements imply that because the emissions from 3-D printers do not have overwhelming and repellent odors, they are safe.

“One needs to be aware of what might come out of [3-D printers],” says Oberdörster. “There [is] reason for concern.”

UFPs are very common in the environment, from natural sources like forest fires and volcanoes and from human sources like engine exhaust. But regardless of their source, it iswell established that UFPs can trigger inflammation and cause serious cardiovascular and respiratory problems when inhaled, particularly for people with pre-existing heart or lung disease. Since 3-D printers are a new source of unintentional UFP production and some of their feedstocks like ceramic and metal powders are very new engineered nanomaterials, their health effects have not been studied.

Thus the thousands of “makers,” as 3-D printing enthusiasts call themselves, who set up in small businesses or their homes, don’t know exactly what risks they face. And assumptions about the chemistry and typical exposure scenarios for the feedstock materials in their typical forms may be far off base for 3-D printing, for an important reason: size matters.

In 2013 Brent Stephens, assistant professor of architectural engineering at the Illinois Institute of Technology in Chicago, published a study of five typical 3-D printers in a retail store. The room was about the size of a “small bedroom,” Stephens says. He and his students measured the concentrations of particles in the room before the printers were operating, during operation, and during a post-printing resting phase. Peak particle concentrations when two PLA printers and three ABS printers were running simultaneously reached 150,000 UFPs per cubic centimeter – nearly fifteen times background levels. ABS printers emitted particles at ten times the rate of the PLA printers. None of the machines was enclosed.

It’s important to note, Stephens says, that in terms of UFP emission numbers, “3-D printers are right smack in the middle” of the pack of common devices, including toaster ovens, laser printers and air popcorn poppers. Popcorn seems benign, he says, so maybe 3D printers are harmless too – or, he adds, maybe it’s the other way around. “Could there be something we don’t know about popping corn?” he asks.

What materials do at “normal” scale doesn’t determine their nano-behavior. UFPs have much more surface area relative to their mass compared to their bulk forms. This not only changes their physical behavior, but it can affect their chemistry as well, says Oberdörster. For example, their extra surface area makes them more reactive than their bulk forms and more likely to catalyze chemical reactions.

This is worrisome, particularly regarding ABS. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency has classified acrylonitrile as a probable human carcinogen and butadiene as a known human carcinogen. Styrene is deemed “reasonably anticipated to be a human carcinogen” by the National Toxicology Program. These ingredients are monomers that combine to form the polymer ABS.

Scott Lusk, director of plastics communications with the American Chemistry Council, says that makers are unlikely to be exposed to these carcinogens because “[W]hen monomers are reacted to form polymers the monomer is generally fully reacted into the polymer. So the potential for exposure to a monomer (even a hazardous monomer) from use of a polymer would ordinarily be expected to be quite low – if at all.”

But no one knows how ABS UFPs really behave in the body. They can move through the skin and lungs to reach the bloodstream. And there’s another disturbing property of ultrafine particles: when inhaled into the nose, they can travel through the olfactory nerve to the olfactory bulb in the brain. They can also move along neurons and spread into the cerebrospinal fluid, according to a 2009 review of research on UFPs and the brain by Oberdörster.

It’s the inhalation route that is the most concerning in the context of 3-D printing, because that’s a major route of exposure for makers, and because the olfactory route to the brain bypasses the blood-brain barrier, which protects that organ against most external bodily insults. Furthermore, as Oberdörster noted in his 2009 review, low-level but chronic inhalation of UFPs may lead to their “significant accumulation” in distant organs even if the transfer rate from the point of entry is low. So if a brain is exposed to a repeated parade of UFPs from a 3-D printer, what happens? Scientists do not know.

There is currently no governmental regulation specific to 3-D printing. The EPA does not regulate indoor air. The Consumer Products Safety Commission has not yet developed a policy regarding the equipment. The American Chemistry Council has not taken a position regarding the possible health risks of 3-D printing, says Lusk.

Nor are there occupational protections in place. The National Institute of Occupational Health and Safety “does not have any recommended limits for exposure of particulate matter,” says Celeste Monforton, an assistant professor in the department of environmental and occupational health at George Washington University in San Marcos, Texas “This is an example of technology moving ahead while our environmental and safety standards are back in the dark ages.”

That leaves the millions of excited and creative would-be users in a quandary.

Stephens would like to see further research on the actual composition of the emitted nanoparticles, including their toxicological profiles, as well as “more information on realistic exposures in real environments,” he says. If the results are problematic, he adds, “Let’s explore ways to build enclosures, add filtration systems, and [set] more stringent guidelines for use.”

In the meantime, there are some things 3-D printing practitioners can do at home or at work to mitigate the risks: buy an enclosed printer; ensure good ventilation in the room where the printer operates; and use a mechanical (non-electronic) air purifier with an ultra-low penetration air (ULPA) filter. These precautions must serve until regulations are in place or true replicators arrive, and either may be a long time coming.

Valerie Brown is an independent journalist based in Oregon's Willamette Valley. She has written about environmental health, climate, radiation, energy and other issues for numerous publications including Miller-McCune Magazine, High Country News, SELF, and Environmental Health Perspectives. In 2009 she was awarded first prize for explanatory print journalism by the Society of Environmental Journalists for her article "Environment Becomes Heredity" in Miller-McCune Magazine.

 

    FDA Considers Approach to Additive Manufacturing of Medical Devices

    Patient-specific printed splints are used to treat life-threatening thoracic constrictions.  Work done at the University of Michigan involves laser sintering bio compatible, bio absorbable materials. 

    Patient-specific printed splints are used to treat life-threatening thoracic constrictions.  Work done at the University of Michigan involves laser sintering bio compatible, bio absorbable materials. 

    The official purpose of this week's FDA-sponsored workshop was "to provide a forum for FDA, medical device manufacturers, additive manufacturing companies and academia to discuss technical challenges and solutions of 3D printing."  In other words, the FDA wants "input to help it determine technical assessments that should be considered for additively manufactured devices to provide a transparent evaluation process for future submissions."

    The FDA is trying to stay current with advanced manufacturing technologies that are revolutionizing patient care and, in some cases, democratizing its availability...  When a next-door neighbor can print a medical device in his or her basement, that clearly has many positive and negative implications that need to be considered.  

    Ignoring the regulatory implications for a moment (I'll get to those shortly), the presentations were fascinating.  In particular, I was intrigued and inspired by the Post-Printing speakers and Clinical Perspectives projects.  

    STERIS representative Dr. Brodbeck cautioned that the complex designs and materials now being created with additive manufacturing make sterilization practices challenging.  How will the manufacturer know if the implant is sterile or if the agent has been adequately removed or if it is suitable? Some materials and designs, for example, cannot tolerate acids, heat or pressure. 

    Wake Forest Presenter Dr. Yoo shares his institution's research on bioprinting

    Wake Forest Presenter Dr. Yoo shares his institution's research on bioprinting

    Dr Boland from the University of Texas El Paso shared his team's work on 3D printed tissues. Using inkjet technology, the researchers are evaluating the variables involved in successfully printing skin.  Another bio-printing project being undertaken at Wake Forest by Dr. Yoo involves constructing bladder-shaped prints using bladder cell biopsies and scaffolding.  And Dr. Liacouras at Walter Reed discussed his institution's practice of using 3D printing to create surgical guides and custom implants.

    Since RapidMade creates anatomical models, one project, near and dear to my heart - pun intended - is work done at Children's National Hospital by Drs. Krieger and Olivieri.  The physicians use printed cardiac models to "inform clinical decisions" ie. evaluate conditions, plan surgeries, and reduce operating time. 

    As interesting as the presentations were, the subsequent discussions were arguably more important.  In an attempt to identify and address all significant impacts of additive manufacturing on medical device production, the subject was organized into pre-printing (input), printing (process) and post-printing (output) considerations.  Panelists and other stakeholders shared their concerns and viewpoints on each topic in an attempt to inform and persuade FDA decision makers.

    An interesting (but expected) outcome was the relative positions of the various stakeholders. Well establish and large manufacturers proposed validation procedures:  material testing, process operating guidelines, quality control,  traceability programs, etc.  Independent makers argued that this approach would impede, if not eliminate, their ability to provide low-cost prosthetic devices.

    Coming from the highly regulated food industry, I completely understand and accept the need to adopt similar measures for some additively manufactured medical devices.  An implant is going into someone's body, so the manufacturer needs to evaluate and assure the quality of raw materials, processing procedures and finished product.  But this means, as in the food industry, the manufacturer needs to know the composition of materials.  Suppliers cannot hide behind proprietary formulations.  If manufacturers are expected to certify that a device is safe, they need to know what ingredients are in the materials they are using.

    Hopefully, the FDA will also agree with the GE representative who suggested that manufacturers should be expected to certify the components and not the process.  What matters is whether or not the device is safe, not what process was used to make it.  Another distinction should be the product's risk level.  Devices should continue to be classified as I, II or III and that classification, not the process used, should determine its level of regulation.

    If you are interested in submitting comments to the FDA on this topic, email them to  http://www.regulations.gov .

     

    Laika's "Boxtrolls" Features 3D Printed Puppets

    The Many Faces of Shoe (Photo Credit:  Laika)   

    The Many Faces of Shoe (Photo Credit:  Laika)   

    Portland-based Laika, recently released its third feature, The Boxtrolls.  What viewers may not realize is the stop-motion production studio, creator of Coraline and ParaNorman, relies heavily on 3D printing to create the puppet characters in its films.  To achieve this feat, Laika employs a rapid prototyping department that overseas the production of prints using color binder jetting technology.  As Brian McLean, director of the department,  described in an interview, this is often easier said than done.  Getting an outcome we are more familiar with than we'd like, he

    likend the printing process to the rendering process in CG - sometimes you input code and something you didn’t quite expect comes out... And (to make oversight more complex) the printers aren’t necessarily consistent from print to print.

    As a result, achieving the desired color and appearance requires some experimentation and a lot of expertise.  In fact, the article mentioned that Laika has developed so much industry knowledge about material and printer performance, it is sometimes contacted by the manufacturer for advice.  In between takes of course...

     

     

    3D Printers Promote Healing Tissues and Bones

    PrintAlive BioPrinter Process...

    Image Credit:  Inside 3DP

    Image Credit:  Inside 3DP

    Researchers at the University of Toronto have built the PrintAlive Bioprinter which prints skin grafts derived from a host patient's own skin cells.  These cells, used as the material "ink" needed to produce the build, are deposited into strips that contain fewer cells than are typical in the "full continuous sheets" commonly used.  The benefits of this approach are two-fold:  it is faster than using cultured skin cells which take two weeks or more to grow enough to be grafted.  And when skin damage runs deeper than the epidermis, this technique's bioprint pattern allows multiple layers to be applied and still survive.

    The team includes Masters students Arianna Mcallister and Lian Lend, PhD student Boyang Zhang and University of Toronto Associate Professor of Mechanical and Industrial Engineering Axel Guenther. To date, their research has been confined to mice, but the researchers reportthe technology has worked to heal "severe wounds" and they expect human trials may be possible in two to three years.

    Further south, a research team at the University of Massachusetts Medical school, led by Dr. Jie Song, is using a MakerBot Replicator to print a latticed scaffold implant it hopes will someday promote healing in damaged bones and tissues.  Unlike the traditional filaments used in FDM printers, this 3D printer is fed a combination of "plastic and the therapeutic stem cells or proteins that a patient needs to heal, and the flexible scaffold that emerges could become a kind of patch for use by surgeons."  The lab is also investigating a similar approach to "regenerate the periosteum, a tissue that covers bone."

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    Mortgage Lender Offers Novel 3D Printed Give-Away as Incentive

    Image and Article Credit:  3DPrint.com

    Image and Article Credit:  3DPrint.com

    I remember a time when banks gave away toasters and other items to win customers' business. One notoriously offered firearms!   Adding a new twist to an old idea, the Swiss Bank Zurcher Kantonalbank recently rewarded a mortgage applicant with a 3D print of the customer's home. Using the home's blueprint to create a 3D model, Zurcher Kantonalbank had the model printed into a replica it then mounted on wood with a plague bearing the bank's name.  That's creative and memorable advertising...  And I can understand why the bank might go to such lengths.  Housing in Switzerland is among the most expensive real estate markets in the world.  Maybe this idea will catch on with other lenders and real estate brokers.

     

     

     

     

    3D Scans and Prints Show Patients What to Expect from Plastic Surgery

    Dr. Avsar holds facial mask (Photo Credit: 3Dprint.com

    Dr. Avsar holds facial mask (Photo Credit: 3Dprint.com

    If you've ever had plastic surgery - or had to decide whether to have it - you understand the anxiety of not knowing what you'll look like.  After being diagnosed with nasal skin cancer , I had MOHS surgery to remove the basal cell carcinoma, and while the surgery itself was successful, the skin flap used to cover the site left an obvious scar and collapsed (misaligned) nostril.  Subsequent procedures improved its appearance, but my plastic surgeon is recommending rhinoplasty to correct the deviated septum.  

    Having faced (pun intended) three surgeries and post-op care, I'm not keen to go through it again - although it'd be nice to breathe better.  Yet I worry about what it will look like.  Drawings can't capture or convey exactly how my nose (with its thickened scar tissue and pulled nostril) will appear.

    But now, a cosmetic surgeon is 3D scanning his patient's faces, manipulating the resulting 3D models to depict their post-operative appearances and printing "before" and "after" masks on a 3D Systems Colorjet printer.  What makes this such an effective tool is that it is a replica of the patient in his or her current and future states, reducing the unknown.

     

    RapidMade is Moving October 1!

    Our new home is just across the street from the PSU Business Accelerator at 2828 SW Kelly

    Our new home is just across the street from the PSU Business Accelerator at 2828 SW Kelly

    After three years at the PSU Business Accelerator, RapidMade is moving on October 1 into a larger space across the street:  2828 SW Kelly Avenue, Suite B.  The 1744 square foot facility includes three offices and a conference room in the front and a large production area in the back which will house our 3D printers, post-processing equipment and additive manufacturing operations.  While we loved working at the Accelerator, our business growth and the industrial nature of our work made staying there difficult...  We've learned that carpets and 3D printers are NOT a good combination. 

    Our improved manufacturing floor plan will allow us to better manage our 3D printing, product design, rapid prototyping, reverse engineering, pattern and tool making, finishing and coating, and traditional manufacturing services.  And equally important, we now have the room to add staff as needed.

    Ironically, the only things changing in our address are the street name and suite number.  Our old address - 2828 SW Corbett Avenue Suite 121 will now be 2828 SW Kelly Avenue Suite B.

    Our suite is the single-story section of the building that is closest to SW Corbett Avenue and our former office

    Our suite is the single-story section of the building that is closest to SW Corbett Avenue and our former office

    Paper Mache Goes High Tech... Paper-Based 3D Printing

    Paper-printed orange (Image Credit:  Mcor and Inside3DP.com

    Paper-printed orange (Image Credit:  Mcor and Inside3DP.com

    I once spent weeks in middle school art class attempting to paper mache a Christmas tree.. I wish I had had a cleaner, life-like outcome.  Now imagine paper mache without the mess and fuss -  a less known additive manufacturing technology, selective deposition lamination, involves gluing together colored office paper sheets to produce an object.  Mcor Technologies sells its version, the IRIS paper-based 3D printer which is seen as an eco-friendly alternative to other materials.  And more colorful.  Inside3DP.com reported, "Because the printer’s ‘ink’ is paper, it can be printed in every color imaginable using Mcor’s International Colour Consortium of over 1 million color shades. This gives the IRIS a major lead over standard desktop 3D printers that print in plastic filament which usually comes in a very limited selection of colors."

    And as the above image shows, the results are pretty realistic.  In fact, one Mcor sales manager was reportedly ordered by airport security to check his paper-printed hammer prototype because it was too close for comfort.

    Unfortunately for me, not only did the technology come too late, I suspect my art teacher would have failed me for "copying."

     

    Will 3D Printing Replace or Augment Craftsmanship?

    Grand Concourse Restaurant:  Photo Credit:  Muer.com

    Grand Concourse Restaurant:  Photo Credit:  Muer.com

    In my hometown of Pittsburgh, there is a beautiful restaurant, the Grand Concourse in Station Square.  It is the site of the former Pittsburgh and Lake Erie Railroad Station.  My grandfather was a cabinet maker for the railroad, and my grandmother once told me, years later, that one of his accomplishments was the refurbishment of its ornate ceiling.  A section of the elaborate crown molding, made of marble I believe, had been destroyed.  My grandfather created a replica out of wood which was such a close match, one couldn't pick out the faux molding.  I imagine the hours of labor that went into this important project and wonder how my grandfather would have reacted to our now being able to quickly scan the molding and print a copy overnight.

    Many believe that the craftsmanship of that generation has largely been lost, replaced by mass produced materials.  But perhaps 3D printing will spur a high-tech revival.  Access to 3D scanning and additive manufacturing technologies already allow us to re-create artifacts that have been lost to time.   RapidMade often gets requests to replicate facades and other architectural features.  We once printed replacement stove handles for an antique oven.  And now, digital designs and additive manufacturing enable artisans to imagine and create exotic and unique objects that would have been difficult, if not impossible, to be made in my grandfather's time.

     

     

    Custom 3D Models Effective Tool to Plan and Discuss Surgeries

    Image Credit:  3DPrint.com

    Image Credit:  3DPrint.com

    Last month, a relative underwent what was expected to be a routine ablation procedure:  9 1/2 hours and 3 a-fib episodes later, the surgery finally finished.  Despite CT scans, X rays and EKGs, the surgeons encountered "structural issues" that complicated the operation.  I thought afterward if they had had a 3D print of his heart, they might have anticipated and planned contingencies based on what they saw.  Apparently I'm not alone in this believe...

    A masters student from Drexel, Jason Kirk, released a study, "3D Printed Cardiac Imaging Data," that suggests that patients and surgeons benefit from reviewing patient-specific 3D printed replicas of their organs prior to consenting to surgery.  Feedback given to the researcher indicates that a majority of surgeons find 3D models more effective than 2D illustrations in sharing information and facilitating discussions.  According to Kirk, “Cardiac anatomy replicas can be used to facilitate Doctor/Patient communication and supplement contemporary visualization techniques by providing accurate three dimensional data which offers additional haptic and spatial feedback specific to the patient’s anatomy and pathology.”

    But how is the replica made?  CT scans and MiMiC software are used to create custom 3D prints that can include cut aways to show the internal structure of the organs.  And the practice is becoming more popular:  RapidMade recently created lung models for a research center interested in using them for patient education.

     

     

    University of Sheffield Touts Breakthrough in High Speed Sintering (HSS)

    Image Credit:  3DPrint.com

    Image Credit:  3DPrint.com

    Just when you thought you'd learned all of the additive manufacturing technologies and acronyms, the University of Sheffield announces a new twist to the 3D printing process called High Speed Sintering (HSS).  Like its sister technology, Selective Laser Sintering (SLS), HSS uses heat to bind layers, but instead of using a laser to melt powder, HSS relies on a carbon black ink that is applied to the powder instead.  To build an object, the specialized heat-sensitive ink is sprayed in the desired shape, and when an infrared lamp passes over the bed, the ink absorbs the heat to fuse the powder.

    So what makes the University of Sheffield's approach unique? They manipulate the concentration of carbon black ink to control the strength and density of 3D prints (more ink, more dense)... a technological version of 50 Shades of Grey. 

    According to Professor of Manufacturing Engineering Neil Hopkinson, 

    “We found that there is a point at which, as the ink levels increase, the mechanical properties start to reduce. This enabled us to identify the ‘sweet spot’ at which you can gain maximum strength with the minimum amount of ink. 3D printing has focused on optimising the shape of a part in order to reduce its weight and still retain its mechanical properties. Printing in greyscale will enable us to optimise the material instead, in a process that would be feasible for commercial manufacture. And by making parts with different densities out of one material, we can also make recycling more straightforward.”

    Research continues to develop a more sophisticated printer that is capable of using a true gray-scale to replace the current dot application method and exceed the 40% density variation they can now achieve.

    Here's a video on 3DPB.com that describes the process.

     

     

     

    Promote Your Business with Custom Marketing.

    Business card holders & promotional items incorporate company logos and industry themes, all in full-color 3D

    Business card holders & promotional items incorporate company logos and industry themes, all in full-color 3D

    Full-Color 3D Printing (ZPrinter 650)

    • Turn your BIM and CAD models into tangible marketing materials.
    • Create colorful models that catch the eye.
    • Show fine, hidden, or internal details of complex designs.
    • Produce inexpensive form/fit prototypes quickly.
    • Use for business presentations, technical training, art projects, architectural models, and many other applications...
    • Bring your favorite video game character to life.
    • Explain an operation to a patient with a replica of their tissue.
    • Print customized Christmas ornaments. 
    • Ask about our proprietary solutions that turn ZPrint parts into usable parts.
    • Learn more about full-color 3D printing

    Build volume: 10 x 15 x 8 inches (larger with assembly).

    Color: with almost 400,000 colors to choose from, why skimp?

    Size: scale-down huge machines, buildings, artwork to hand-held or table-sized replicas

    Logistics: avoid lugging heavy machinery to trade shows

     

    Is Additive Manufacturing Another Gold Rush?

    RapidMade.jpg

    Sometimes the frenzy around 3D printing reminds me of  the Gold Rush... Additive manufacturing (AM) has a lot of value in and of itself, but, like the Gold rush, it is also having a transformative impact on its environment.  

    Consider these similarities:

    Challenges over land claims surfaced during the Gold Rush which prompted the establishment of property rights.  Many would argue that similar problems will arise from 3D printing's impact on intellectual property and patents.

    Once the gold that was easiest to retrieve was gone, The Gold Rush encouraged technological innovation that enabled miners to extract more of the precious metal from the riverbeds and ground.  Almost daily, we read about advancements in AM - both in material applications and printing processes which in some cases are creating precious metals.

    As the Gold Rush continued, only larger organized enterprises remained profitable.  While we are not there yet, we've seen a fair number of mergers and acquisitions for a relatively young industry.

    Secondary industries fared well, if not better, than the miners themselves.  Merchants, shippers, lodgers and entertainers thrived when most miners failed to make money.  Today, an increasing number of 3D printing supplies, trade shows, conferences, publications, certifications, and courses are being offered.

    San Francisco and California grew significantly from the influx of 49ers  The establishment of AM Centers of Excellence in Youngstown and Detroit may well reverse the population loss of the Rust Belt region. 

    The Gold Rush spurred an economic boom.  Many industry experts and government officials believe AM will boost the U.S. economy by bringing back manufacturing. 

    Let's just hope that we don't see some of the problems (environmental damage, human rights issues) the Gold Rush created.

                                       

    RapidMade Collaborates on Project to Send Yeast into Space

    Image Credit:  Ninkasi Brewing

    Image Credit:  Ninkasi Brewing

    If you haven't heard...now you have: CSXT, Ninkasi Brewing and RapidMade have collaborated on a project to send yeast into space. That's right...SPACE BEER!!  Now we love all of the work that we do, but this was definitely one of the more unique and interesting jobs we've had...

    Ninkasi Brewing Company and the Civilian Space eXploration Team (CSXT) plan to launch a rocket into space this summer which includes a payload of 16 strains of brewer's yeast that can then be used to make beer that is literally "out of this world." The inaugural flight marks the establishment of the Ninkasi Space Program (NSP). 

    To help ensure the health of the yeast during its trip, Ninkasi asked RapidMade to collaborate on the container's design and manufacture.

    "With almost a year of planning, NSP will finally get off the ground this month. Ninkasi’s lab technician, Dana Garves, and RapidMade, a Portland, Ore. company specializing in 3D printing, worked hand-in-hand to design and create a payload container built specifically to safely carry the 16 yeast strains into space and back to Earth for brewing—the first to do so."

    “I couldn’t contain my excitement when I first heard of NSP,” says Garves. “We spent hours researching, developing and testing what we think will ensure that the yeast travels safely and returns to us healthy enough to brew with.”

    We can't wait to raise our glasses to toast Ninkasi and CSXT's achievement.

     

     

     

    Has Media Attention on 3D Printing (Additive Manufacturing) Awakened Sleeping Giants?

    Now that 3D printing (additive manufacturing) has become the latest media darling, it's no surprise that this attention has awakened various national, state, and local authorities to its promise.  Yes, I follow these developments because I have a vested interest as someone who owns a 3D printing, engineering and manufacturing firm.  But part of my interest comes from growing up in a rust belt town once known as the "center of the universe" for steel manufacturing.  (Very few steel plants remain today).  Up the street (interstate) sits the New Stanton plant, so every time we drive between Baltimore and Pittsburgh, we pass the site. From the late 70s - late 80s, it housed a VW factory (a great coup for the state at the time) and afterward a Sony TV plant moved in and operated from the early 90s until 2008 when it also closed.  

    We are too familiar with this scenario which has played out numerous times in every state. Products have life cycles.  Companies merge and consolidate.  Production shifts to locations with better labor and material costs.  So often public officials and civic leaders feel pressured to compete with one another to land the next big thing.  Is that N-B-T additive manufacturing? Maybe...

    America Makes, a collaboration of government, business, academic and non-profit representatives promotes 3D printing innovation and resides in the heart of the Rust Belt.  Similar initiatives have since been launched...

    An Illinois consortium was selected to lead The Digital Manufacturing & Design Innovation Institute.

    The Lightweight & Modern Metals Manufacturing Innovation (LM3I) Institute will be directed by a Michigan-based consortium.

    The Next Generation Power Electronics National Manufacturing Innovation Institute is comprised of a North Carolina-based consortium.

    A competition is now underway (application deadline this week) to select a consortium for the Clean Energy Manufacturing Innovation Institute for Composites Materials and Structures.

    And, not to be left behind, various counties, states and regions have joined pursuit.

    Notice anything all these collaborations have in common?  Any west of the Mississippi?  I'm not saying there aren't any, but a quick internet search came up with none.  Nor do I begrudge the rust belt - as someone who managed and lived through a plant closing there, I support bringing back manufacturing jobs to the region.  And I live in Maryland, so obviously I'm excited about its promotion of 3D printing.  But as someone whose AM business is headquartered in Portland, Oregon (yes, it's a long commute), I don't want the Northwest to miss out. Because, at least for now, this emerging technology should generate enough opportunities for all.  The Northwest's demographics, location and passion for sustainability, collaboration, and creativity make it an ideal innovation hub.