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 3 of 4)
Anthony Atala, who leads the Institute for Regenerative Medicine, predicts that it’s only a matter of years before hospitals have machines that can print skin—from subcutaneous fat up through keratinocytes to hair follicles, oil glands and melanocytes—directly onto a patient’s body. “Skin is the least complex organ,” Atala says. “Then we’ll see tubular structures, then hollow and then non-hollow organs.” Including, eventually, a heart? “I hope in my lifetime,” he says, laughing. “And I’m still very young.” (Atala is 54.)
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Dealing with complexity is what additive manufacturing is best at. Engineers for Lotus Renault GP, in pursuit of lighter, faster and more fuel-efficient Formula 1 race cars, use stereolithography and laser sintering to experiment with cooling ducts and fins, eliminating material that’s inessential to function. And the process is quick. Pat Warner, Lotus Renault GP’s advanced digital manufacturing manager, says he can turn around parts in two days instead of ten weeks.
It’s high-end applications like this that have raised 3-D printing’s public profile. “The aviation industry has more than 22,000 printed parts flying right now, and people are walking on 3-D printed orthopedic implants,” says Terry Wohlers, the president of the independent consulting firm Wohlers Associates. “These are very regulated, very demanding industries and these parts are performing well.”
Canadian designer Jim Kor is building a three-wheeled, teardrop-shaped car that weighs just 1,200 pounds. Kor shaves weight by combining multiple parts. The dashboard, for example, is printed with ducts attached, eliminating the need for multiple joints and their connecting plastic and metal parts. Somewhat less dramatically, bakers are extruding icing from print heads to decorate cakes; stop-motion animators are using rapid-prototyping 3-D printers to create thousands of nuanced facial expressions for film characters; mathematicians use the technology to model complex geometric shapes; and 3-D photo booths are scanning people and printing miniature replicas of their heads or entire bodies.
Additive manufacturing would not have flowered without major advances in computer-directed modeling. A decade ago, it took weeks to generate a digital 3-D model; now it takes only hours. Design software has become more accessible, and scanners, too, have become more powerful and easier to use—even at home. This past March, Microsoft announced a forthcoming software release that will endow its Kinect for Windows computer sensor with the ability to quickly create detailed 3-D models of people and objects.
Engineers and product designers scan an existing object or contour by shooting thousands of points of light at it and loading the “point cloud”—a 3-D ghost image of the original—into a computer. Multiple scans are aligned and filtered, points are connected to their near neighbors to form polygons, holes are filled and blemishes removed. Finally, with a click of the mouse, the surface of the image is smoothed to form a shrink-wrapped version of the original. Off to the printer the digital file goes.
And if the client doesn’t like the finished print? Not a big deal: The supply chain is a computer file, not parts from around the world, and there’s no need to retool machines to make design changes. The trajectory from idea to approval to manufacturing to marketing to sale is, again, vastly accelerated.
“Once a shape is in a usable 3-D format, the sky’s the limit,” says Rachael Dalton-Taggart, director of marketing communications for Geomagic, a pioneer in sculpting, modeling and scanning software. The company’s products include software that gives digital designers tactile feedback. Wielding a penlike, haptic device—which has motors that push back against the user’s hand—designers can trace the contours of a digital model, feel its surface textures and carve shapes. “It’s like working in digital clay,” says Dalton-Taggart. “The program lets designers create particularly complex and highly detailed organic shapes,” whether for sculptural jewelry or patient-specific medical implants, such as a perfectly modeled prosthetic nose.
The opportunities for customization have long made additive manufacturing appealing to the medical community. Biomedical companies commonly use 3-D modeling and printing to produce personalized hearing aids as well as dental restorations, orthodontic braces—and most recently, skulls. This past March, after FDA review, an unnamed patient had 75 percent of his skull replaced by a plastic implant printed by the Connecticut-based Oxford Performance Materials.
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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