[HN Gopher] New Process Allows 3-D Printing of Microscale Metall...
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New Process Allows 3-D Printing of Microscale Metallic Parts -
Www.caltech.edu
Author : rbanffy
Score : 17 points
Date : 2022-12-05 22:16 UTC (44 minutes ago)
(HTM) web link (www.caltech.edu)
(TXT) w3m dump (www.caltech.edu)
| cwkoss wrote:
| "Then, in the "reaction" portion of the process, the researchers
| burn away the hydrogel portion of the structure in a furnace that
| reaches 700 to 1100 degrees Celsius, depending on the material.
| Because the melting point of all metals is higher than the
| combustion temperature of the hydrogel, the metal remains intact.
|
| The heat not only removes the hydrogel, it also causes the
| overall structure to shrink as the hydrogel burns off, resulting
| in an even tinier metal structure. With this process, in addition
| to pure metals, the team can 3-D print metal alloys and
| multicomponent metallic systems, with feature sizes around 40
| microns, or less than half the width of a human hair."
|
| ---
|
| How much does it shrink? Does the shape deform as it shrinks? I
| would imagine certain geometries wouldn't work because the
| outsides would shrink faster than the inside, which could
| break/bend some features.
|
| Seems like awesome tech, but I suspect there are a number of
| limitations to this technique which the article does not discuss.
| misthop wrote:
| At those temps I believe many metals will also end up being
| heat treated. And it sounds like the time will be dependent on
| how much hydrogel is present, so there will be at least a lower
| bound on what heat treatment you need apply. I wonder how that
| works with the shrinking, along with lots of other properties
| you may want of the end product
| qwezxcrty wrote:
| There is a older (commercialized [1]) process called two-photon
| photo-polymerization, which can also create mind blowing
| nanoscale 3D parts [2]. Although limited in choose of materials
| it can print, still pretty cool and sometimes can find
| applications in photonics.
|
| [1] https://www.nanoscribe.com/en/ [2]
| https://www.epfl.ch/research/facilities/cmi/wp-content/uploa...
| hyferg wrote:
| They seem to achieve the 'multimaterial' label by soaking
| different parts of the polymer in exclusive precursors. If you
| want to create advanced microelectronics using this method, you
| would probably want to be able to control gel-differentiation
| process as part of polymerization.
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