3D Printing Webinar and Virtual Event Roundup, July 13, 2020

We’ve got six webinars and virtual events to tell you about in this week’s roundup, including two about ceramics 3D printing, one focused on patents and another on pharmaceuticals, a live tour, and a live look at 3DEXPERIENCE. A few of these are taking place today…read on to learn the details!

Patents in Additive Manufacturing

The European Patent Office (EPO), one of the largest public service institutions in Europe, is launching a new study on Monday, July 13th, titled “Patents and additive manufacturing – Trends in 3D printing technologies,” to offer evidence that Europe is a global 3D printing innovation hub. Ahead of the launch, there will be a panel discussion between EPO president António Campinos and Christian Archambeau, Executive Director of the European Union Intellectual Property Office (EUIPO), and then the EPO’s Chief Economist, Yann Ménière, will present the study.

The study is part of a four-day digital conference, from July 13-16, regarding the impact of 3D printing intellectual property, organized by the EPO and the EUIPO and including speakers like Isinnova founder and CEO Cristian Fracassi and stereolithography inventor Chuck Hull. You can register for the entire conference here.

3D Printing in Pharmaceuticals and Dietary Supplements

From 9 am to noon each day July 13-16, the US Pharmacopeia (USP) and International Association for Pharmaceutical Technology (APV) will be co-hosting a virtual workshop series, “The Promise of 3D Printing in Pharmaceuticals and Dietary Supplements: Quality and Standards Considerations,” that will look at how pharmaceutical and supplement 3D printing is progressing near and at point-of-care (POC), standards and guidance, and potential applications. Several key objectives of the series including discussing quality management needs in areas like testing, design optimization, and terminology, understanding best practices, engaging stakeholders to look at 3D printing progress in health and wellness, and determining what quality needs can be fulfilled with better guidance and standards.

These webinars are suggested for POC healthcare practitioners, 3D printing enthusiasts and industry professionals, pharmaceutical industry stakeholders, and business and science leaders from academic institutions, companies, and advocacy/professional organizations related to personalized health. You can register for the webinar series here. You can select which days you want to join, though USP and APV encourage total workshop attendance.

Exploring 3DEXPERIENCE WORKS Live

Also on July 13th, 3DEXPERIENCE experts John Martorano III and Gian Calise will begin hosting a live webinar series focused on exploring 3DEXPERIENCE WORKS. In this series of webinars, which will take place every other Monday, Calise and Martorano will answer all your questions about the platform in a fun, yet informative way. Each session will feature a different 3D design workflow, along with best practices and tips, and guest appearance from other SOLIDWORKS experts.

At the end of every webinar session, attendees can also take a poll to suggest future topics. Register for the webinar series here.

Lithoz on 3D Printing Ceramics

The first ceramics webinar this coming week will be held by Lithoz on Wednesday, July 15th, at 10 am EST, and titled “Ceramic 3D printing: advancing new applications in AM.” For the first 30 minutes, webinar moderator Davide Sher, the co-founder and CEO of 3dpbm, and Lithoz co-founder and CEO Johannes Homa will discuss the unique properties of the material, talk about how ceramics can benefit AM applications in a variety of applications, and provide some insight into LCM technology. The final 15 minutes will be reserved for Q&A.

“The impact of 3D printing is today being felt far beyond the metal and the plastic industry. This is particularly true in the world of ceramics, where processes such as Lithoz’ ceramic 3D printing technology are unlocking new applications which were previously impossible.”

Register for the free webinar here. If you miss this one, Lithoz will be holding another webinar about ceramics in August.

Live Tour of Ricoh 3D

Also on July 15th, Ricoh 3D will be offering a live tour of its Additive Manufacturing Centre, since COVID-19 is keeping it from offering an in-person look at its AM, metrology, and process control capabilities. During the tour, you’ll get a chance to see the company’s in-house 3D printing technology, in addition to learning from its material and design experts how AM can benefit your business in a low-risk way, meaning without any “capital expenditure commitments.”

The tour will take place at 10 am EST, and will also discuss more advanced 3D equipment, services, and technologies. Register for the live tour here.

Ceramics Expo 2020 Webinar

This week’s second webinar on ceramics will be held at noon EST on Thursday, July 16th, by Ceramics Expo, the largest annual trade show in the US for the technical ceramic and glass industry. The webinar, “Accelerating the Commercialization Process of Ceramic Materials to Stimulate Growth in the Wake of Covid-19,” will discuss how to speed up commercialization to stimulate growth for the glass and ceramics supply chain, how regulation helps or hurts this process and if the pandemic has changed it, and how glass and ceramics manufacturers can “work with their clients to ensure continued investment in new product development.”

“By making more efficient the processes of material characterization, prototype production and material optimization, the reduction in cost and resources will help give ceramic materials an edge over those which may have a shorter and less expensive process. This session is designed to help bridge the gap between research and engineering in order to accelerate the process of scaling up new products.”

Register for this ceramics expo here, and the Ceramics Expo Connect virtual event in September here.

Do you have news to share about future webinars and virtual events? Let us know!

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Lithoz Ready to “Pull the Trigger” on New 3D-Printed Drug & Vaccine Purification Method

3D printing may potentially have an impact on the way that pharmaceuticals and vaccines are produced, including those for fighting the SARS-CoV-2 virus that causes COVID-19. The E.U.’s NESSIE project is a transnational European initiative that brings together five partners across Austria, Norway, and Portugal to develop a new generation of monolithic columns for separating molecules for biopharmaceutical production. The end result may be a quicker, more efficient and less expensive method for making vaccines. To learn more, we spoke to Martin Schwentenwein, head of materials for ceramics 3D printer manufacturer Lithoz.

A chromatography column 3D printed using Lithoz’s ceramic 3D printing technique. Image courtesy of Lithoz.

The project is dedicated to improving the process of chromatography used to separate and purify molecules for pharmaceutical purification. During chromatographic operations molecules and proteins are separated based on size or selective interactions, such as how well they dissolve in water or fats. This is accomplished by pumping a pressurized liquid solvent with the material being purified through a column filled with a specialized material, which separates impurities or unwanted byproducts. The members of the NESSIE project are working to improve this column component to make the process more efficient.

The group is developing methods for tailor-making these columns to optimize the behavior of the fluid running through them and reduce changes in pressure that occur during the purification process. In particular, the fluid pressure drops as the material interacts with the column, limiting the speed of purification. By reducing this drop in pressure, the entire process can be made more efficient, thus improving speed and reducing cost.

Lithoz was brought into the project due to the fact that existing columns are made using silicon dioxide material. As a specialist in ceramic 3D printing, the company is able to offer its expertise to producing columns with the fine resolution and materials needed for biopharmaceutical purification. Silicon dioxide has the advantage of combining the porosity needed to filter molecules, while maintaining temperature stability. It can also be sterilized, which is often required for processing biopharmaceutical materials.

Depending on the pharmaceutical material that is being researched or manufactured, the purification operation can be made up to 20 percent more efficient. With the processing of easier molecules sped up by up to five minutes per run, this translates into hours or days of work saved in drug R&D or even days or weeks saved in mass production of medications and vaccines. At the moment, the partners have developed a proof-of-concept for improving column designs more generally, but Schwentenwein said that the columns can in principle be tailored for each specific biopharmaceutical product that is studied or produced:

“Of course, improving the speed is the most tangible outcome, but going beyond that, is the vision that the separation mechanics can be improved overall, and you can ideally move significantly beyond this 20 percent times saving. You can move more into the domain where it can really get to half the time that you need. But for that also the whole design has to be optimized, has to be tailored. For now, we’re aiming for this basic proof-of-concept that, by using this 3D printing technique in combination with ceramics, that you can get this improvement for the whole separation process.”

Schwentenwein said that these columns could be used for the purification of basically any molecule, whether it’s during the drug screening and research phase, or for production. This includes the wide array of vaccines and medications being developed to combat the SARS-CoV-2 virus.

Renderings of chromatography columns with different geometries. Images courtesy of SINTEFweb on YouTube.

Currently, there are about 23 companies creating such solutions. This includes more inexpensive drugs for treatment, such as the decades-old antimalarials from the chloroquine family of medications to more potentially costly medicines like remdesivir. As for vaccines, products range from more traditional vaccines derived from the inactivated virus to much newer DNA and RNA vaccines, classes of vaccines that were previously not considered acceptable for human use due to the fact that in some cases they could not provide immunity, may have unpredictable effects and could potentially cause unintended consequences.

Despite the uncertainty about these newer vaccines, several RNA and DNA vaccines, some developed by partners of the U.S. Department of Defense, are undergoing clinical trials. Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, said in March that a vaccine won’t be available for the public for another 12 to 18 months.

Regardless of the timeline for the public availability of a SARS-CoV-2 vaccine, the technology developed from Project NESSIE wouldn’t necessarily aid in production immediately. However, it could be used to purify a vaccine or drug used to prevent or treat the COVID-19 illness.

At the moment, the team is fine-tuning its production process and ensuring repeatability for printed columns, determining that they are able to achieve feature resolutions of well beyond 100 microns very homogeneously throughout across entire batches parts. This is something that has not been available before. The project is set to conclude at the end of October this year, but it won’t likely be ready for commercialization quite yet at that time.

The group is looking for a manufacturer who is ready to manufacture columns in mass, which would require a farm of Lithoz ceramic 3D printers. According to Schwentenwein, using a single printer that has not been optimized for production, it would be possible to produce 50 columns daily. If this were scaled up, it would be possible to manufacture in the numbers necessary for the market.

The columns currently being developed are smaller, meaning that they are more suitable for R&D purposes, but the size can be made larger for biopharmaceutical manufacturing, which would mean fewer columns per print job. The biggest bottleneck at the moment, Schwentenwein says, is the lack of having a user/partner who is able to produce these columns in a quality controlled environment. However, he believes that they have the technology in place so that, once they find this partner interested in mass production, all that would be necessary would be to “pull the trigger.”

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EU-backed Project NESSIE uses 3D printing to accelerate vaccine production

Researchers from the EU-backed initiative named Project NESSIE, have created a novel technique for purifying vaccines that could lead to reduced costs and enable vaccines to become more readily available to countries in the developing world.  Austrian ceramic 3D printing specialist Lithoz together with Genlbet and CERPOTECH began the project last year with research organizations […]

Improvements to the BioFabrication Facility on the ISS Thanks to Lithoz

Scientific discoveries and research missions beyond Earth’s surface are quickly moving forward. Advancements in the fields of research, space medicine, life, and physical sciences, are taking advantage of the effects of microgravity to find solutions to some big problems here on Earth. Researchers in 3D printing and bioprinting have taken advantage of space facilities that are dedicated to conducting multiple experiments in orbit, such as investigating microgravity’s effects on the growth of three-dimensional, human-like tissues, creating high-quality protein crystals that will help scientists develop more effective drugs, and even growing meat with 3D printing technology.

The BioFabrication Facility (BFF) by Techshot and nScrypt (Credit: Techshot)

On November 2, 2019, a Northrop Grumman Antares rocket successfully launched a Cygnus cargo spacecraft on a mission to the International Space Station (ISS). The payload aboard the Cygnus included supplies for the 3D BioFabrication Facility (BFF), like human cells, bioinks, as well as new 3D printed ceramic fluid manifolds that replaced the previously used that were printed out of polymers. According to Lithoz – the company behind the 3D printed ceramic fluid manifolds – they are enabling advancements in bioprinting at the ISS.

The additive manufactured ceramics have been in service since November 2019 and Lithoz claims they have proven to provide better biocompatibility than printed polymers, resulting in larger viable structures.

Lithoz, a company specializing in the development and production of materials and AM systems for 3D printing of bone replacements and high-performance ceramics, printed the ceramic manifolds using lithography-based ceramic manufacturing (LCM) on a high-resolution CeraFab printer in collaboration with Techshot, one of the companies behind the development of the BFF. Moreover, the ceramic fluid manifolds are used inside bioreactors to provide nutrients to living materials in space by the BFF.

Testing of the ceramic 3D printed manifolds is focusing on biocompatibility, precision, durability, and overall fluid flow properties; and the latest round of microgravity bioprinting in December yielded larger biological constructs than the first BFF attempts in July.

NASA engineer Christina Koch works with the BioFabrication Facility in orbit (Credit: NASA)

Techshot and Lithoz engineers and scientists worked together to optimize the design and the manufacturing processes required to make it. Techshot Senior Scientist Carlos Chang reported that “it’s been an absolute pleasure working with Lithoz.”

While Lithoz Vice President Shawn Allan suggested that “their expertise in ceramic processing really made these parts happen. The success of ceramic additive manufacturing depends on working together with design, materials, and printing. Design for ceramic additive manufacturing principles was used along with print parameter control to achieve Techshot’s complex fluid-handling design with the confidence needed to use the components on ISS.”

Headquartered in Vienna, Austria, and founded in 2011, Lithoz offers applications and material development to its customers in cooperation with renowned research institutes all over the world, benefiting from a variety of materials ranging from alumina, zirconia, silicon nitride, silica-based for casting-core applications through medical-grade bioceramics.

This work, in particular, highlighted an ideal use case for ceramic additive manufacturing to enable the production of a special compact device that could not be produced without additive manufacturing while enabling a level of bio-compatibility and strength not achievable with printable polymers. Lithoz reported that Techshot engineers were able to interface the larger bio-structures with the Lithoz-printed ceramic manifolds and that the next steps will focus on optimized integration of these components and longer culturing of the printed biological materials. While conditioned human tissues from this mission are expected to return to Earth in early 2020 for evaluation.

Back in July 2019, Gene Boland, chief scientist at Techshot, and Ken Church, chief executive officer at nScrypt, discussed the BFF at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Port Canaveral, Florida, how they planned to use the BFF in orbit to print cells (extracellular matrices), grow them and have them mature enough so that when they return to Earth researchers can encounter a close to full cardiac strength. Church described how a tissue of this size has never been grown here on Earth, let alone in microgravity. The 3D BFF is the first-ever 3D printer capable of manufacturing human tissue in the microgravity condition of space. Utilizing adult human cells (such as pluripotent or stem cells), the BFF can create viable tissue in space through a technology that enables it to precisely place and build ultra-fine layers of bioink – layers that may be several times smaller than the width of a human hair – involving the smallest print nozzles in existence.

Flight engineer Andrew Morgan works with the BioFabrication Facility (Credit: NASA)

Experts suggest that bioprinting without gravity eliminates the risk of collapse, enabling organs to grow without the need for scaffolds, offering a great alternative to some of the biggest medical challenges, like supplying bioprinted organs, providing a solution to the shortage of organs.

With NASA becoming more committed to stimulating the economy in low-Earth orbit (LEO), as well as opening up the ISS research lab to scientific investigations and experiments, we can expect to learn more about some of the most interesting discoveries that could take place 220 miles above Earth. There are already quite a few bioprinting experiments taking place on the ISS, including Allevi and Made In Space’s existing Additive Manufacturing Facility on the ISS, the ZeroG bio-extruder which allow scientists on the Allevi platform to simultaneously run experiments both on the ground and in space to observe biological differences that occur with and without gravity, and CELLINK‘s collaboration with Made In Space to identify 3D bioprinting development opportunities for the ISS as well as for future off-world platforms. All of these approaches are expected to have an impact on the future of medicine on Earth.

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Lithoz unlocks Corning glass ceramics for 3D printing

Austrian ceramic 3D printing specialist Lithoz and American multinational specialty materials company Corning have been working together to expand the capabilities of their respective technologies. Lithoz’s proprietary Lithography-based Ceramic Manufacturing (LCM) technique was recently used to 3D print Corning glass ceramic materials for the first time. The successful experiment has now yielded a new potential […]

Incus lithography-based metal 3D printing technology to debut at Formnext 2019

Metal 3D printing has a new modality. Incus GmbH, a startup OEM from Vienna, Austria, has announced the forthcoming launch of a lithography-based metal additive manufacturing method at Formnext 2019 next month. The Hammer Series will be the company’s first 3D printers, two beta versions of which have reportedly been in development for over a year. “Our […]

3D Printing News Sliced: Sintratec, HP, 3D Systems, Renishaw

In the latest edition of the 3D Printing Industry news digest – Sliced, we have news about 3D printed spare parts, future of additive manufacturing in India, and 3D printed food. Read on to learn more about Sintratec, Mimaki, 3D Systems and Renishaw. Beyond borders Sintratec, a Swedish SLS printer manufacturer, has signed a distribution […]

Lithoz installs 3D printer at Colorado School of Mines, marking new membership with ADAPT consortium

Austrian ceramic 3D printing specialist Lithoz has joined the Alliance for the Development of Additive Processing Technologies (ADAPT), an industry-academia consortium dedicated to solving challenges in additive manufacturing. Through the partnership, Lithoz also installed its CeraFab 7500 ceramic 3D printer at the Colorado School of Mines, where the ADAPT consortium is headquartered. The installation of […]

Interview With Michael Steinbach on 3D Printing Technical Ceramics

Of all the materials that are currently underused but have high potential none are more exciting to me than ceramics. Ceramics itself as an age old material can give us access to many quotidian product categories through a noble material. Technical ceramics have incredibly high performance in wear, chemical resistance, temperature resistance while being incredibly dimensionally stable. These high-performance materials are relative unknowns but are used in the most demanding of industrial, medical and tooling applications. Companies such as Lithoz and ECM have been innovating extensively in 3D printing ceramics but very little is known about the potential of these materials in 3D printing. We decided to interview Michael Steinbach of Steinbach AG, a German specialized technical ceramics and high-performance materials firm. Having been active extensively in technical ceramics the company responded to clients desires for more design freedom in ceramic parts by acquiring Lithoz machines including a new Cerafab 8500 to begin making series parts in ceramics for several industries.

What kind of company is Steinbach & why should I work with you?

Steinbach AG is a joint-stock company and a mid-sized partner of industry operating in global markets. In Germany, we are one of only a few suppliers of technical ceramics. We provide our customers with up-to-date technology and apart from an extensive technical consultation and individual development we offer a quick and extremely precise production from lot size 1 onward.

A 3D printed technical ceramic part made by Steinbach for a fluid reactor.

Why did you start 3D printing ceramics?

Steinbach AG with its division „Technical Ceramics“ has specialized in additive manufacturing of technical high-performance ceramics for industrial and medical applications.

In the past, we increasingly received requests for individually manufactured complex geometries. That’s why we acquired our first 3D printer in 2016.

Do the 3D printed parts perform better or worse than conventional ones?

Based on the generative manufacturing method LCM, for the first time prototypes of 3D-ceramics can be manufactured in highest series quality. In contrast to the conventional Rapid-Prototyping-Methods where the components just transmit the spatial impression and the shape in general, the prototypes manufactured by LCM can be charged. Due to the LCM method, ceramic 3D-prototypes dispose of a quality of 0.4 Ra without any postprocessing and reach a theoretical density of more than 99 %. The tolerances are +/- 0.1 mm. Withal the components dispose of an extremely smooth surface even without subsequent finishing.

In conventional manufacturing, the designer has to take the producibility of the products into account. That leads to limitations in geometry and design so that compromises must be made. In the LCM-method, however, free design is possible determined by the application and not dependent on the manufacturing process. So for the first time even difficult structures and complex geometries such as cavities, fine channels and undercuts can be implemented. The characteristics of the ceramic components are significantly influencable even during the manufacturing process. The material qualities do not change while doing so.

What kind of customers 3D print ceramics? What are the parts used for?

Areas of application for different industries:

•High-temperature applications

•Chemistry and laboratories

•Medical technology

•Automobile industry

•Analysis and measurement equipment

•Microreactors / Microfluidic applications

•Micro-electronics

•Plasmatechnology

•Aerospace sector

For example in the field of high-temperature technology materials have to withstand high temperatures up to far more than 1000 °C without any distortion or fatigue. For most materials that is not sustainable in the long term. The technical 3D-printing ceramics can withstand operation temperatures of 1600 °C and more. Moreover, even at highest application temperatures in the ultra-high vacuum they keep stable without softening or flowing. Broad application areas for components from 3D-printing ceramics have been opened up in the industrial furnace construction, in the glass and steel industry, in control and measuring technology, in research, in the development and in the field of thermal analysis and process engineering.

What kinds of ceramics can you print in?

Steinbach AG produces technical 3D-printing ceramics made of alumina and zirconium oxide. We generally use three ceramic materials: FormAlox 999, FormAlox 998 and FormAcon 3Y.

Do you see 3D printed ceramics expanding?

Definitely. We see this every day with growing inquiries. 3D printed parts – especially with technical ceramics – are becoming increasingly important.

Many customers try it out and are thrilled by the many advantages such as

• Outstanding hardness

• High temperature resistance (1600°C)

• Superior wear resistance

• High corrosion resistance

• Chemical resistance

• Food safe, biocompatible

• Electrical insulator

What is holding back 3D printed ceramics?

At first glance the high cost. But in contrast to conventional forming processes, in the generative LCM-manufacturing no specific tools are necessary as the processing directly follows the CAD dataset.

€500,000 available in Metalysis and ESA space exploration competition

The European Space Agency (ESA) and UK metallurgic company Metalysis have launched a €500,000-reward competition to devise systems that will aid space exploration. The competition is to design a process-monitoring system that works with Metalysis’s existing electrochemical cells. These cells convert refined oxides and ores into metal alloy powders, including those used in 3D printing […]