What Lies Ahead for 3-D Printing?
The new technology promises a factory in every home—and a whole lot more
- By Elizabeth Royte
- Smithsonian magazine, May 2013, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 4)
That notion may thrill or horrify you, but the business model—on-demand printing of customized products—has significant advantages over traditional retailing models. If you can quickly and cheaply replace a broken cabinet handle by printing it at home (or scanning what you want and e-mailing those specs to a print shop), you needn’t travel to a store and stores needn’t keep millions of everything on hand. Shoe designs could be encoded as digital templates that could be manipulated and printed to perfectly fit any customer’s feet. Inventories would shrink, along with transportation, handling and storage costs. (Retail shops might even disappear if orders can be fulfilled directly by manufacturers who deliver to their customers’ homes.) And if supply lines are less dependent upon manufacturing centers abroad, they’re also less vulnerable to interruption.
In conventional manufacturing, every increase in design complexity costs money and time. With additive manufacturing, it’s as easy to print a simple tube as it is to print, say, a double helix wrapped in a spiral staircase draped by a spider web. High-resolution printers can even make products with gears and hinges.
Shapeways, a 3-D printing service, has built its business upon the assumption that a sizable demographic is willing to pay more for customized products than for mass-manufactured goods. The company fulfills design orders from tens of thousands of customers, or “community members,” at plants in the Netherlands and in Long Island City, New York, using printers that handle a variety of materials, including ceramics, sandstone, plastics and metals.
“We’re giving people access to million-dollar machines,” Elisa Richardson, Shapeways’ PR and social media manager, says. “We’re enabling them to run businesses through our company.” And what do those businesses sell? “Mostly cultish things, like Minecraft models and Dungeons & Dragons dies.” Ah, I think: We’re back to the skull rings. “Are customers requesting prints of anything truly surprising?” I ask. Richardson pauses, then says, “It’s amazing how unsurprising the stuff we make is. It’s a doorknob or a crib part from a mom in suburbia.”
Clearly, 3-D printing is a boon to personal consumption, but the machines can potentially provide great social value as well. Imagine villages in the developing world printing parts for farm equipment or water pumps, and the solar panels that drive them. Imagine mobile production plants quickly deployed in disaster zones, printing out anything from arm splints to tent stakes.
In the future, suggests Peter Friedman, publisher of the Innovation Investment Journal, car dealers might include free printers with vehicles, so that owners can make their own parts, replacing and redesigning forever. “3-D printing is not just the future of making things you don’t have,” he wrote in a column. “It’s the future of making things that you do have immortal.”
One of those things might even be the human body—or at least some of its parts.
***
Carlos Kengla, a slim young man wearing statement eyeglasses and a four-inch-long soul patch, could easily pass for a hipster Maker of small-batch bourbon or bespoke bicycles. But Kengla has spent the last few years focusing on the production of ears, which he prints using cells that are taken from human ear cartilage and then propagated in the lab. Kengla’s fellow scientists at the Wake Forest Baptist Medical Center’s Institute for Regenerative Medicine are developing, in collaboration with other labs, processes to systematically print muscle tissue, skin, kidneys, cartilage and bones. For years, researchers have been building organs by hand, pipetting progenitor cells—which have the capacity to differentiate into specific types of cells—onto degradable scaffolds. They’ve had varying levels of success: Handmade bladders have been functioning in a handful of patients for many years; a miniature kidney implanted in a cow successfully excreted urine. But constructing organs by hand is laborious and plagued by human error. Rapid prototyping, with cartridges of cells squirting from a print head and guided by a computer, Kengla says, “is faster and more precise, to the micron. It allows us to place different types of cells in specific shapes and in intricate patterns.”
Kengla stares into a computer monitor, clicks through what seems like a hundred menus and initiates three cartridges loaded into a print head that hovers over a petri dish atop a small platform. One cartridge contains cartilage cells, another contains biodegradable scaffold material and the third contains a water soluble gel, which temporarily provides support until it’s later washed away. Back and forth the print head shuttles with a pneumatic whoosh, switching between the cartridges, constructing the organ in stacked, successive layers, each 150 microns thick. A high-intensity light and microscope allow Kengla to follow the machine’s progress on a monitor. After 45 minutes, the shape of an ear begins to emerge.
Perfection remains a few years in the future. Still, the printing of organs—and cartilage and skin and tissue—holds great promise for transforming health care and extending longevity. Transplanted organs created from a patient’s own tissues won’t be rejected. Waiting times for kidneys and other donor organs will decrease, and organ traffickers could be put out of business (the World Health Organization estimates there were almost 11,000 organs sold on the black market in 2010). Prescription drug companies are eager to test drugs and other therapies on rapidly prototyped organs or tissue, instead of on animals or human beings.
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Comments (3)
This technology is about to explode. Just as others are doing and have done in the past. These devices will become ever more sophisticated and cheaper. When engineering, genetics and bio-mechanics all catch up to each other things are gonna get weird. Imagine tiny printers creating billions of nano-machines with the power to splice genes and build complex organisms? They can become self replicating. Pandora's Box? Will this technology be used for the good of man or to create ever more deadly weapons. The first printed rifle and pistol have been tested... What is next. Is this the new tower of Babel? Soon everyone will have the power to create whatever their mind can conceive of. Wonder what the future holds for us?
Posted by The One on May 9,2013 | 01:02 PM
... and this is where the traditional printing industry is the big loser. As the whole move with 3d printing starts right off at the end-user or end-customer and even non-geeky households directly understand the benefits of printing 3d gadgets or re-creating 3d parts, there is not much room in the market for traditional printing businesses. Even when thinking in an industrial scale - for example when it comes to the production of massive amounts of 3d prints based on metallic substrates, a lot of companies may decide to just hold such a machine in their own facilities. So where does that leave printing companies. Well - they have to explore other new markets to keep the machines running. Another branch that highly benefits from this development surely are the "content providers" aka 3d-modelling artists who create the 3d meshes and online stores to sell them. While the term "3D printing" at this time is mostly used to describe the creation of physical objects, there are indeed other new products that fit the genre and that rely on traditional printing methods. For example, a lot of new non-ditigal advertising formats (e.g. 3D floor decals -> http://www.shapeshiftermedia.com/floorposters/) make use of the 3D-hype as well and are being produced on a large scale. Dear printers - fear not - but adapt and prepare before the 3D printer makes it to the birthday wish list of your own children. Plenty of new opportunities to keep the machines running out there. And while you're at it - GO GREEN ;) best regards Fleur DeCal
Posted by Fleur DeCal on April 29,2013 | 07:48 AM
3-D printers will one day, using stem cells and DNA, Print fully functional humans, complete with computer induced memories, after years of space travel, to distant "new" planets to colonize them.
Posted by oldude on April 25,2013 | 02:27 PM