EPFL scientists have created a breakthrough 3D printing method that uses hydrogels as templates to produce ultra-dense, durable metals and ceramics.
In science and engineering, it's unusual for innovation to come in one fell swoop. It's more often a painstaking plod through ...
Researchers at Lehigh University are developing a faster, more accurate way to predict how metals solidify during 3D printing ...
Magnetotelluric (MT) data, which contain measurements of electric and magnetic field variations at Earth's surface, provide ...
Researchers have developed a generative CAD system specifically for 3D printing. Generative CAD tools have been around for several years, and they are fun to use. They’re quite different from normal ...
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