EPFL scientists have created a breakthrough 3D printing method that uses hydrogels as templates to produce ultra-dense, durable metals and ceramics.
Discover Somanity, a French company that develops exoskeletons for people with disabilities using 3D printing technology.
The Bambu P2S is the hotly anticipated successor to the best-selling Bambu Lab P1S, and in every way, it's a significant ...
Scientists at EPFL have reimagined 3D printing by turning simple hydrogels into tough metals and ceramics. Their process ...
This idea was arguably born out of necessity, thanks to Apple's brilliantly designed Magic Mouse and its charging port on the ...
Vat photopolymerization is a 3D printing technique in which a light-sensitive resin is poured into a vat, and then ...
When it comes to FDM 3D prints and making them stronger, most of the focus is on the outer walls and factors like their layer adhesion. However, paying some attention to the often-ignored insides ...
Modix is well known for their increasingly huge 3D printers. Up to now most of those devices have been using the FFF process ...
The process starts with tetraethyl orthosilicate (TEOS), a sol-gel industrial precursor used since the 1930s. It’s produced ...
Researchers at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and the Hasso Plattner Institute have developed a new 3D printing ...
Instead of starting with metal-containing resins, the EPFL team first creates a 3D scaffold using a simple water-based gel, ...