New Kind of 3D Printing
from Stanford
Engineers at Stanford and Harvard have laid the
groundwork for a new system for 3D printing that doesn’t require that an object
be printed from the bottom up.
From: Stanford News Service
By Laura Castanon
April 20, 2022 -- While
3D printing techniques have advanced significantly in the last decade, the
technology continues to face a fundamental limitation: objects must be built up
layer by layer. But what if they didn’t have to be?
Dan Congreve, an
assistant professor of electrical engineering at Stanford and former Rowland
Fellow at the Rowland Institute at Harvard University, and his colleagues have
developed a way to print 3D objects within a stationary volume of resin. The
printed object is fully supported by the thick resin – imagine an action figure
floating in the center of a block of Jell-O – so it can be added to from any
angle. This removes the need for the support structures typically required for
creating complex designs with more standard printing methods. The new 3D
printing system, which was recently published in Nature, could make
it easier to print increasingly intricate designs while saving time and
material.
“The ability to do this
volumetric printing enables you to print objects that were previously very
difficult,” said Congreve. “It’s a very exciting opportunity for
three-dimensional printing going forward.”
Printing with light
At its surface, the
technique seems relatively straightforward: The researchers focused a laser
through a lens and shone it into a gelatinous resin that hardens when exposed
to blue light. But Congreve and his colleagues couldn’t simply use a blue laser
– the resin would cure along the entire length of the beam. Instead, they used
a red light and some cleverly designed nanomaterials scattered throughout resin
to create blue light at only the precise focal point of the laser. By shifting
the laser around the container of resin, they were able to create detailed,
support-free prints.
Congreve’s lab
specializes in converting one wavelength of light to another using a method
called triplet fusion up-conversion. With the right molecules in close
proximity to each other, the researchers can create a chain of energy transfers
that, for example, turn low-energy red photons into high-energy blue ones.
“I got interested in
this up-conversion technique back in grad school,” Congreve said. “It has all
sorts of interesting applications in solar, bio, and now this 3D printing. Our
real specialty is in the nanomaterials themselves – engineering them to emit
the right wavelength of light, to emit it efficiently, and to be dispersed in
resin.”
Through a series of
steps (which included sending some of their materials for a spin in a Vitamix
blender), Congreve and his colleagues were able to form the necessary up-conversion
molecules into distinct nanoscale droplets and coat them in a protective silica
shell. Then they distributed the resulting nanocapsules, each of which is 1000
times smaller than the width of a human hair, throughout the resin.
“Figuring out how to
make the nanocapsules robust was not trivial – a 3D-printing resin is actually
pretty harsh,” said Tracy Schloemer, a postdoctoral researcher in Congreve’s
lab and one of the lead authors on the paper. “And if those nanocapsules start
falling apart, your ability to do upconversion goes away. All your contents
spill out and you can’t get those molecular collisions that you need.”
Next steps for
light-converting nanocapsules
The researchers are
currently working on ways to refine their 3D-printing technique. They are
investigating the possibility of printing multiple points at the same time,
which would speed up the process considerably, as well as printing at higher
resolutions and smaller scales.
Congreve is also
exploring other opportunities to put the up-converting nanocapsules to use.
They may be able to help improve the efficiency of solar panels, for example,
by converting unusable low-energy light into wavelengths the solar cells can
collect. Or they could be used to help researchers more precisely study
biological models that can be triggered with light or even, in the future,
deliver localized treatments.
“You could penetrate
tissue with infrared light and then turn that infrared light into high-energy
light with this up-conversion technique to, for example, drive a chemical
reaction,” said Congreve. “Our ability to control materials at the nanoscale
gives us a lot of really cool opportunities to solve challenging problems that
are otherwise difficult to approach.”
Additional Stanford
co-authors of this research are postdoctoral scholar Tracy Schloemer; former
visiting researcher Michael Seitz; and graduate student Arynn Gallegos. Other
co-authors, including a co-lead author, are from the Rowland Institute at
Harvard University.
This research was
funded by the Rowland
Institute at Harvard University, the Harvard PSE Accelerator Fund, the Gordon
and Betty Moore Foundation, an Arnold O. Beckman Postdoctoral Fellowship,
the Swiss National Science Foundation, the National Science Foundation, and a
Stanford Graduate Fellowship in Science & Engineering (a Scott A. and
Geraldine D. Macomber Fellowship).
https://news.stanford.edu/press/view/43438
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