3D printing is an additive manufacturing process rapidly growing in the economy's industrial, commercial, and hobbyist segments. The industry's popularity is due to the ground-breaking benefits of innovative technology. The global 3D printing industry is growing rapidly and is projected to grow from $18.3 billion in to over $83 billion by .
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3D printing has broken into every major industry. The applications are most noticeable in the aerospace, automotive, medical, and dental sectors. The education, construction, robotic, fashion, and food industries also integrate 3D printing into their businesses.
The onset of Industry 4.0 in helping fuel the rapid rise in the 3D printing industry, the centerpiece of additive manufacturing. Industry 4.0 integrates new technologies, including cloud computing, the Internet of Things (IoT), additive manufacturing, artificial intelligence (AI), and data analytics, into their production and business operations. These integrated technologies will transform the way companies produce products and services.
For most people, 3D printing sounds less like a manufacturing technique than magic. Often, people misunderstand it as a replicator from Star Trek, said Kent Mages, owner of Custom Color 3D Printing. Some sci-fi thing [where]... I can just snap my fingers and boom.
Thats not how it works, though. Yes, you can 3D-print lots of things, including large-scale things like bridges. But you cant do so instantaneously, Mages explained. It takes time. It also takes the right hardware and support structures. You need something to actually print on, he said.
Here are the broad strokes of how the process works: You start with a printer. Some models can fit on a desk. Industrial versions, on the other hand, can measure more than 20 feet tall and need lots of space. But they all work roughly the same way: rather than printing line by line, like their 2D brethren, 3D printers print layer by layer.
Instead of printing from PDFs, however, they rely on digital blueprints or a computer-aided design (CAD). And in place of printing ink, they use sculptural materials like plastic, metal and concrete
The printers forge objects one at a time, typically in 0.1-millimeter layers. The exact process depends on the printer and the material, but it usually involves heating and cooling. Users can print with molten material that cools to a solid, or powder that fuses into a solid when its heated
As early as , 3D printing and its applications were heralded as the future of manufacturing. As the hype at the time went, people would no longer need to buy replacement parts for their air conditioners and computers because theyd just print them at home. Products would become far easier to customize
But while 3D printing certainly has opened up new possibilities, it hasnt taken over yet. And though its been put to some incredible uses the designers at Rael San Fratello used the technology to 3D print homes from mud, nutshells and coffee grounds it isnt right for every manufacturing situation. In fact, it can even create some problems. In , we talked to three professionals in the industry about the pros and cons of 3D printing.
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Owner of Custom Color 3D Printing
3D printing has improved time from conception to implementation. It dramatically cuts down the amount of time thats spent coming up with new product ideas, which leads to more product ideas being tested in the marketplace and not just product ideas, but solutions to engineering problems. So whether its a new product or a solution to an aerospace engineering problem, more integration more quickly means faster improvement.
The CEO of Nexa3D and a digital manufacturing entrepreneur
With 3D printing, we get to reclaim some design and craftsmanship skills. If you look back 100, 150 years ago, in every community and every town we had all the artisanship and craftsmanship that we needed to support a hyper-local community. The industrial revolution and manufacturing robbed us of those capabilities. 3D printing connects creativity with an output device that allows almost everybody to create and make. 3D printers are getting faster and more accessible. Print speed, material performance and cost are reaching a level of democratization. It allows for a generation of digital craftsmanship.
At the same time, traditional CAD is undergoing a massive transformation. CAD one of the digital tools in which designers and engineers could conceptualize and detail their ideas used to be complicated and labor-intensive to use. But today, we have whats called generative design, or computer-generated design. If you can set up a design challenge, a computer-generated design assisted by machine learning materializes. This design will be very efficient, and your computer can autonomously check it to confirm its structurally sound. Think of what Siri for CAD might look like thats kind of what Im talking about.
Lead designer at Selin Olmsted
When we design eyewear, the first step is coming up with the front shapes. We come up with a good range of different sketches, and usually in our office we do a quick paper cutout of the shape to see if it really looks good on faces. But eyewear is a 3D product. With just a cutout, its really hard to see the head curve and the tilt of the frame, which are more related to the third dimension of the product.
Thats where 3D printing becomes really handy. We use it for prototypes before we do injection molding, because injection molding is really expensive. And once youve done a batch of injection molded frames, you cant really make adjustments to the design.
Mages: 3D printing enables design concepts that arent capable of being produced in any other medium. I came to this industry from the world of 2D printing. We would get requests for signage from clients in my previous job where we couldnt fulfill it because it wasnt technically possible. The 3D printer that I use, and just 3D printing in general, opens up a lot of sign possibilities in terms of color and style that you cant accomplish in any other medium.
Reichental: In many instances 3D printing allows us to create more efficient products that mimic the efficiency of nature. What do I mean by this? If you look at the way that we are mechanized for mobility how our arms or legs function you realize that these great, efficient, lightweight, load-bearing structures like bones, joints, were already patented by nature millions of years ago. But most of those highly-efficient, lightweight, topology-optimized structures are not readily manufacturable. 3D printing allows us to unlock and commercialize some of it; the technology makes complexity free.
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Mages: I come from the 2D printing world, and I was floored by how much waste there is in 2D printing. I think its one of those things where most people knew how much waste there was, it would be disturbing. But right now, I have a powder-based system. (Mages printer involves layers of dry powder, custom-dyed and then heated to form a solid.) If I make a bad part, it cant be recycled, but at the end of a job, the powder that didnt get turned into a part gets shaken off and reused. The next build that I do is 80 percent old powder, 20 percent fresh material.
Ive been very pleasantly surprised at not just how efficient 3D printing has become, but how focused a lot of the manufacturers are on making the materials more sustainable and reusable. We dont print a lot of plastic its called PLA but its probably the most common filament type on a hobbyist level. When you print with it, it creates a lot of garbage plastic that you snap off the final product and throw away. But quite a few companies are now looking at taking that material, recycling it and melting it down so you can then run back through your printer.
Reichental: Generally speaking, I am concerned about how the convergence of technologies will affect jobs. Its not just 3D printing its ubiquitous connectivity, the infinite computing power in the Cloud, the motorization of robotics, autonomous drones making deliveries and driverless cars replacing Uber drivers and so forth.
In many industries, though, 3D printing creates a lot of jobs. Theres no question these will be different jobs, but therell be more jobs in terms of laying out and creating the factory automation enabled by 3D printing so setting up factories, running factories, re-imagining the supply chain and procurement, dealing with price and logistics. Today we have inventory managers, tomorrow were going to have the digital inventory manager. I think manufacturing is coming back, but I think that manufacturing is becoming more distributed and localized. The production jobs that were going to see in the future are going to look very different from the assembly lines of yesterday.
Choi: As I learn more about 3D printing, Ive realized that it can create jobs outside manufacturing and design, too. I went to this food 3D printing class one day. You can create something edible thats beautiful its almost like a sculpture, in a way. The teacher, Luis Alcalde, was telling me he wants to create 3D printing restaurants. It could really happen. And I feel like 3D printing could create new industries, not just in food. I cant wait to see how people use it.
Mages: The 3D printer that Im on HPs MJF 580 can produce quite a few parts at the same time. From a volume perspective, I can make 300 of something the size of a small key chain at a time. If youre doing injection molding, though, you could make 30,000 of those in a day of production.
At the same time, injection molding can be really costly for a small production run. The dream is talking to a consumer about where 3D printing makes sense in their production line. If theyre looking to test the viability of something, or if theyre making something really customized or bespoke, it might be more cost efficient to look at 3D printing than injection molding.
Reichental: Speed is a hurdle. We need to be able to work at speeds comparable to injection molding presses. That needs to be done at scale. But at NEXA3D, we are now printing at speeds of one centimeter every minute. Thats a first in, call it shattering some of the remaining barriers or challenges in 3D printing. We feel for the first time that we can take 3D printing from dial up internet speed to broadband speed its that dramatic.
Reichental: Most of the materials used in 3D printing are more expensive than comparable materials used in other manufacturing processes, like injection molding or CNC machining. One of the hurdles to mainstreaming 3D printing is bringing materials to market that are much more affordable. Thats something that I am personally committed to and am doing through NEXA3D.
Choi: I think were still in the process of exploring 3D printing materials. I know theres a variety of materials out there, but I think theyre not as flexible as acetate, which is what a lot of glasses frames are made out of. With acetate frames, theres a specific way of shooting the core wire and the hinges into the frame. They heat up the acetate so it gets a little softer, and then they shoot that metal into it, which gives them a cleaner way of putting in the hinges.
With 3D printing, one of the hard things is metal mechanics. Around the hinge area, the frames become really messy. They actually have to connect the fronts and the arms, which we call the temple, by hand, one by one. The alignment is not perfect. Its not as exact as it is with acetate frames.
Mages: Technology in itself doesnt have ethics. People have ethics. I think the vast majority of people hobbyists, or people like me who run a 3D print service are looking to just create and be creative. Are there going to be people that do things with 3D print technologies that are questionably ethical? Thats a question more about humanity than 3D printing.
I think we might see technology creep into 3D printers the same way that its crept into scanners, where if you try to scan a dollar bill, the scanner shuts down. But you know people are crafty and people find ways around that too.
Reichental: Every great technology can do unimaginably good things in the hands of good players, and unintended things in the hands of bad players. I don't want to bring up again the whole discussion of 3D printing guns because I think that its already been hashed over and over again because its such a lightning-rod example.
It doesnt have to be guns. 3D printing can also be used for counterfeiting, or just stealing somebody elses design and replicating it. It could be potentially circumventing duties and customs fees when you teleport a design digitally. All these issues will have to be thought through and resolved, because the moment that you make your inventory digital, the moment your designs can be teleported, the conventional way of doing trade and commerce and all of what we call legally accepted transactions gets challenged.
Pros of 3D printing:
Cons of 3D printing:
3D printing may be bad for the environment if the materials used are unsustainable (such as plastics) or if printing machines require extensive energy.
Though, 3D printing can also be environmentally-conscious if recyclable or compostable materials are used and printing machines use renewable energy sources.
Whether or not a 3D printing project is expensive will depend on the print's size, complexity and its required materials.
For example, 3D printing a small object and using an at-home 3D printer may be less expensive than printing a large object using a third-party 3D printing service and their machinery.
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