Stanford's new 3D printing tech is up to 10 times faster than the quickest printer

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Stanford's new 3D printing tech is up to 10 times faster than the quickest printer
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  • 📰 IntEngineering
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Researchers were successful in printing models of well-known structures from several nations.

3D printingA rising platform gently removes the object, which appears to be fully formed, from a thin resin pool in a process known as CLIP printing. While a layer of oxygen hinders curing at the bottom of the pool and produces a "dead zone" where the resin remains in liquid form, a series of UV pictures transmitted through the pool harden the resin into the proper shape.

“With this new technology, we actively inject resin onto the areas of the printer where it’s needed.”With iCLIP, you may print with different types of resin at varying stages of the printing process by injecting more resin individually. Each new resin just needs its own syringe.

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