Authors
John R Tumbleston, David Shirvanyants, Nikita Ermoshkin, Rima Janusziewicz, Ashley R Johnson, David Kelly, Kai Chen, Robert Pinschmidt, Jason P Rolland, Alexander Ermoshkin, Edward T Samulski, Joseph M DeSimone
Publication date
2015/3/20
Journal
Science
Volume
347
Issue
6228
Pages
1349-1352
Publisher
American Association for the Advancement of Science
Description
Additive manufacturing processes such as 3D printing use time-consuming, stepwise layer-by-layer approaches to object fabrication. We demonstrate the continuous generation of monolithic polymeric parts up to tens of centimeters in size with feature resolution below 100 micrometers. Continuous liquid interface production is achieved with an oxygen-permeable window below the ultraviolet image projection plane, which creates a “dead zone” (persistent liquid interface) where photopolymerization is inhibited between the window and the polymerizing part. We delineate critical control parameters and show that complex solid parts can be drawn out of the resin at rates of hundreds of millimeters per hour. These print speeds allow parts to be produced in minutes instead of hours.
Total citations
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Scholar articles
JR Tumbleston, D Shirvanyants, N Ermoshkin… - Science, 2015