New NIST method measures 3D polymer processing preciselyRecipes for three-dimensional (3D) printing,
New NIST method measures 3D polymer processing preciselyRecipes for three-dimensional (3D) printing, or additive manufacturing, of parts have required as much guesswork as science. Until now.Resins and other materials that react under light to form polymers, or long chains of molecules, are attractive for 3D printing of parts ranging from architectural models to functioning human organs. But it’s been a mystery what happens to the materials’ mechanical and flow properties during the curing process at the scale of a single voxel. A voxel is a 3D unit of volume, the equivalent of a pixel in a photo.Now, researchers at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) have demonstrated a novel light-based atomic force microscopy (AFM) technique – sample-coupled-resonance photorheology (SCRPR) – that measures how and where a material’s properties change in real time at the smallest scales during the curing process.Read more. -- source link
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