Live Entrepreneurship & 3D Value Networks: Sustainability in Food packaging

Sustainability is on everybody’s lips and single use plastics does not have a good reputation. When the public perception is that plastic is all bad, it is hard to remind people what good plastic has done for the food industry. Plastic has enabled our entire grocery store system to keep products on the shelf for a long time, which reduces costs and enables the export of produce to faraway places. Whilst plastic can deform itself to protect all kinds of products from chicken wings to tomatoes, 70% of it still ends up in landfill. It is a big task technically, logistically, politically, and economically to create food storage, delivery, and transport systems, which can please everybody from the Greenpeace activist to the corporate CEO.

Follow our video series in collaboration with 3dprint.com in order to understand what part 3D printing plays in the creation of new value network driven concepts and companies in the food industry. Tune in to hear from Gary Robinson from Synaptic Packaging how to tackle sustainability challenges in food packaging.

The post Live Entrepreneurship & 3D Value Networks: Sustainability in Food packaging appeared first on 3DPrint.com | The Voice of 3D Printing / Additive Manufacturing.

Lazy Manufacturing: Making Things Using Less Energy

A friend took a broken part of his old boat out of his pocket.  “Can you fix this?” he asked me.

It was a complicated aluminium die-casting from the cold end of the engine’s heat exchanger.  A tab with a hole for one of the fixing screws had sheared off, and the decades had not been kind to the rest of it either.

“I think so,” I said, and stuck the tab back on with Blu-tack.

His eyes narrowed. “It was a serious question.”

“I know.”  I started to build a riser and sprue structure with more Blu-tack.

“Ah!” he said. “You’re going to make a mould and cast me a replacement.  Thanks!  But how will you melt the aluminium?”

“I won’t,” I said. “Aluminium would shrink, so it would end up the wrong size.  I’m going to use Lego.”

He sighed and wandered into the next room.  I heard him say something to my wife about her bloody husband and seaworthiness. Then he asked her if he could pour himself another whisky.

The application of computers to manufacturing has transformed the way humanity makes things, transformed the efficiency with which we do it, and transformed what it is possible to make.  A great deal has been written about those transformations, going right back to John T. Parsons’ first numerically controlled (NC) machine tool in the 1950s [1].

But, while that has been happening, another change in how we make things has been progressing in parallel.  We have been reducing both the forces and the temperatures that we need to deploy (and hence reducing the energy needed) to make a great range of products.  Much less has been written about this change, and adumbrating it is the purpose of this article.

The Industrial Revolution started with iron; indeed – only slightly apocryphally –  it started at Ironbridge in Shropshire with Abraham Darby smelting iron ore using coke, which allowed his grandson to make, among other things, the eponymous bridge.  The revolution rapidly moved from iron to steel and took in brass, and later aluminium and other metals along the way.

Whenever you are going to make something from a metal, you need to get it very hot, or hit it very hard, or both.  Metals, or at least the metals we use in most products, are tough; that is why we use them.  For 150 years great force and great heat were the way that we made things.

Then, around the time of Parsons’ first NC tool, materials that had begun to be developed decades earlier – plastics – started to become significant.  These were much weaker than metals, but melted at much lower temperatures or – in the case of some thermosets – could even be formed at room temperature.

Moving to the present day, every year now humanity makes about 100 million cubic meters of steel and four times that volume of plastics.  Plastics overtook steel towards the end of the Twentieth Century because we discovered that – for many things – we simply didn’t need the strength, and that plastics were a lot more versatile, in part because they required much lower forces and temperatures to work with.  The introduction of plastics is the first reason that force and temperature have reduced when we make things.

Conventional manufacturing is about cutting or moulding material (and also bending, to a lesser extent).  Given the toughness of metals and the high temperatures at which they melt these – as I mentioned above – need big forces and temperatures.  But of late the application of computers to manufacturing has facilitated a number of new ways of cutting that require little or no force.  The most ubiquitous is the lasercutter – a bandsaw made of light.  But there are also water jet cutters and (pre-dating the NC revolution) spark erosion and electrochemical machining.  All these cutting machines remove material without applying large forces to it.

And now, of course, we also have 3D printing.  All the versions of this (even those that work with metals) apply very little force as they build things.  We can imagine a 3D printer controlled by punched cards like a Jacquard loom that it would have been possible to build in the Nineteenth Century, but that simply didn’t occur to anyone.  So we had to wait until the late Twentieth for the low-force 3D printing revolution to start.  That, and the other methods in the previous paragraph, are the second reason that force has reduced when we make things.

Finally, the most productive manufacturing system on Earth – biology – has always used low-force methods.  A growing organism usually has little more opposition to overcome than the weakest of the forces in physics – gravity.  And what grows is not that strong either.  With a few exceptions (such as tooth enamel) most biological materials are much weaker than metals.  Indeed, almost all of them are plastics of a sort, being formed from polymers of various kinds like hair, which is made from keratin, insect exoskeletons, which are made from chitin, and wood, which is made from cellulose and lignin.

Some time ago colleagues and I did a systematic study of how biological systems evolve solutions to engineering problems, and contrasted that with human solutions to similar problems [2].  One of our conclusions was that, when humans do engineering (at least traditionally) we have tended to throw in energy to create a solution.  But when evolution is doing engineering it tends rather to throw in information in the form of complicated structure or data processing to create its solutions.

Wood is a good example[3].  Both cellulose and lignin are brittle materials, but wood never shatters like glass.  This is because it is made from cellulose fibres in a helix glued together with lignin.  As stress causes wood to fail, the lignin fractures but the cellulose stays intact, stretching like a spring.  This process absorbs a great deal of energy, which is why wood is so tough.  The complexity of this structure is only possible because it is programmed (which is also the way we’d have to do it if we were to imitate it).

A Squash Stem

So, as human manufacturing has progressed we have used lower temperatures, less force, and weaker materials.  To achieve that, in many cases, we use computers to do clever control of the manufacturing process.  In this way human manufacturing is beginning to approach the way that evolution has always solved the same sorts of problems.

I put some rods in the holes in the die casting to act as cores.  Then I built a Lego tank to hold it, and lined its inner faces with Sellotape to stop it leaking.  It made a Lego bridge across the top from which I suspended the hose connector using a length of cotton.

I poured liquid silicone into the tank around and over the die casting and left it to set.

Then I took the resulting solid rectangular lump of silicone from the tank, cut round the embedded die casting with a scalpel, dug out the core rods, and separated the two halves of the mould that I had made.  I scraped away the Blu-tack risers and sprues, put the cores back, and held the two (now empty) halves of the mould together with elastic bands.  I mixed up some resin and poured it in.

An object originally requiring a temperature of 700oC and a pressure of 200 bar to make had been reproduced at room temperature and pressure in a material about a third as strong as the original, which was quite strong enough.

That was a few years ago, and the result is still at sea.  But if it fails, my friend has a couple of spares in his locker.  As I pointed out to him, it was almost as easy for me to make three as to make one…

Adrian Bowyer is a British engineer and mathematician; in 2005 he created the RepRap Project to make a self-replicating 3D printer; this has been widely credited with starting the desktop 3D printer revolution.

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_numerical_control#Parsons_Corp._and_Sikorsky

[2] Julian F.V. Vincent , Olga A. Bogatyreva , Nikolaj R. Bogatyrev , Adrian Bowyer , Anja-Karina Pahl: Biomimetics: its practice and theory, Journal of the Royal Society Interface, ISSN: 1742-5689, (2006).

[3] G. Jeronimides, The fracture of wood in relation to its structure, Leiden Botanical Series, No. 3, 253-265, 1976

Images: Berkshire Community College, Numerical Control Patent, Adrian Snood, Fabrice Florin, Berkshire Community College.

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Polymers As A Service: More Profits, More Planet?

Plastics are a victim of their success. Easy and inexpensive to make they have become ubiquitous. Facile to turn into new compounds, to extend through additives or blends they are optimized for almost every application. Now the Great Pacific Garbage Patch and worry about the environment have put plastics into the firing line. It’s a bit unfair, really like blaming ecological problems on cars or oil companies. We, as human beings, are responsible for taking care of our planet. We are the stewards of this beautiful blue ball. If we don’t correctly incentivize, tax, stimulate or punish companies and individuals for doing what’s best for this planet excesses and destruction will always occur. There is no one problem affecting our environment; all are the same integrated system all under threat from the same plague, humankind. We are what is destroying the forests, and we are the ones throwing away styrofoam cups. We are over-consuming our resources, and we are the ones that don’t care. Whatever the cause celebre whether they be CFK’s, lead, oil, cars, energy etc., they are all just symptoms caused by this uniquely destructive creature: the human.

Shredded recycled plastic pieces on display at the Minnesota State Fair.

A few times we’ve seen lucky scrapes with disaster avoided through political will and people coming together as a movement. Think of the banning of DDT, the relatively swift response to the hole in the ozone layer, reduction of lead in fuels. These responses were global and rapid. If we look at today’s fragmented world, however, we seem unable to agree on anything. With science and the idea of the truth under continuous assault its extremely unlikely we can do anything worthwhile globally for any time to come. So what solutions are there to a world under assault from the suicidal doomsday termites homo sapiens? Greed. Gordon Gecko didn’t invent greed as a motivator it has powered most all of our non-sex based decision making since time immemorial.

 

So how do we save the planet through greed? Simple, we make it pay to save the world. In the case of polymers, we should motivate the firms who make them to enter into much more lucrative businesses. Making polymers themselves is a relatively bulk low-value business for the most part. There are some islands of supreme profitability and some excellent high volume businesses, but margins suck and frankly, where is growth and the future? Who wants to work at a tobacco business with shinier looking larger plants? What investor is going to get excited about an unpopular business with a single-digit multiple that has people protesting against it?

Enter Materials As A Service. The path to a much more lucrative business could be had through looking at the entire life cycle of polymers through the higher multiples and tech love of service businesses. Polymer companies could agree to contracts with manufacturers which will take into account all of the CO2 and other materials consumed through the creation of the part. When the part is end of life, the polymer company collects it and repurposes as another part. This part is also rented to the new client and end of life it is collected and recycled again by the polymer company.

So a virgin ABS part is created as a seat belt component for a car. Ten years later, this part is ground up and together with some virgin ABS turned into a car mirror component. Ten years later, when this is end of life, it is returned as a dashboard component. Ten years after this it is recycled once again to a B side interior component. Ten years later is gets mixed with some fiber and becomes a behind the dashboard component. Ten years after that more filler is mixed in and it becomes a nonstructural filler part behind the dash. Ten years after this it becomes filler for the dash. Then it is recycled for one more time and becomes a seat component inside a Leolux couch to live on for a few more decades. The polymer company has managed this part through its different forms plus all pollutants, created CO2 and waste now for a 100 years.

By making this process, transparent manufacturers can compensate and reduce material usage as well as indeed be accountable for pollution and usage. The polymer and the recycling process is more valuable as a service business, and environmental outcomes are better. Meanwhile, the polymer business has a competitive advantage, higher margins, higher valuations, and revenues.

By becoming custodians of materials in service businesses, polymer companies can become the solution and not the problem. More profits, more planet?

Carbide Wilson Ruins

Creative Commons: Tony Webster, BiblioArchives, Biblio Archives, Joanne Clifford.

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Marco Valenzuela of Additive Design Studio Makes an Innovative 3D Printed Pipette

Marco Valenzuela is a designer who specializes in crafting innovative and new 3D printed products. Originally coming from the gaming world, his Additive Design Studio now is focused on using Additive Manufacturing and 3D printing exclusively in product design. The team works with Design for Additive Manufacturing methods and also works with services to deliver parts to customers in FDM, SLA, Polyjet, MFJ, and metals. Valenzuela made a pipette for a customer and this new design for a tried and true lab stalwart really interested us. We really believe that a wave of innovation will come to medical devices, medical supplies and even things like disposables through 3D Printing the right solution in medicine, and spoke with Valenzuela about his creation.
Why did you print it? 
The dual pipette was designed and 3D printed to fulfill specific needs in the fluid piping process. These needs were previously met. However the process was time consuming. The combining of the two pipettes into one provides for a speedy and more efficient workflow when processing large amounts of medicine.
The need was for two different functions:
1.The ability to suction a single fluid mixture into separate reservoirs for individual ejection into separate containers.
2.The ability to suction two different fluid mixtures separately and eject them into a single container together.
How does it work?
The dual pipette utilizes the same principles of pulsion and suction as a common syringe. The plungers are pulled up to create a vacuum and draw fluid up the spout and pressed down to eject fluid from the spout. The 3D printed plungers are fitted with normal rubber plunger tips to ensure an air-tight seal.
What is different about it?
The pipette is a 3d printable, simplistic design. The primary difference is the ability to 3D print this pipette quickly.  This means that we’re producing copies without the need for large-scale manufacturing. Reducing production time and availability to technicians by weeks.
What materials and processes were used to print it?
A variety of materials have been experimented with. The most suitable 3D printed material for the device will be EnvisionTEC’s E-Shell 200. A liquid photopolymer designed for DLP 3D printers that produces strong, tough, water-resistant ABS like parts with high detail that are Class IIa biocompatible according to ISO 10993/Medical Product Law and are CE certified for use as hearing aid products, otoplastics, and medical devices.
What software did you use?
I utilized a variety of 3d CAD design software in the development process. The final design was created in Lightwave 3D. I find a mix of traditional CAD and Polygon based modeling software helps me produce better more ascetic product designs.
Why is it a good design?
I enjoyed the creation of the dual pipette and consider it a good design because it has succeeded in fulfilling a specific need without otherwise costly measures. The dual pipette design aids in the development of medicines related to many medical treatments including Cerebral palsy.
We think that there is a bright future for 3D printed medical devices and medical supplies. Yes, this is a high touch regulatory environment so operating in it will never be simple. Medical supplies and devices have a lot of niche products however and a lot of comparatively low volume high priced goods. On the whole it will be exciting to see real low-cost innovation come to the medical world via 3D Printing.

New Polypropylene Powder with Superior Processing and Part Characteristics for Laser Sintering Process

AM Polymer Research GmbH presents its third series material, a polypropylene powder from the ROLASERIT® family. The developed ROLASERIT® PP01OF1 thus makes this important standard plastic available for laser sintering. The material has very good processing properties. The processing of the material has already been successfully demonstrated without problems on various common laser sintering systems, and is used by several service providers for part production. According to the company’s philosophy of selling only final-qualified materials, only short running-in times on the machines are necessary. Thus, the production of customer parts is possible within a few days. In particular, the material has no tendency to curling or distortion, which makes it easy to achieve robust processing conditions.

The components have good mechanical properties and, in contrast to many other new material developments for laser sintering, exhibit ductile component behavior with elongation at break of over 30%. The range of applications for manufactured components is therefore diverse and ranges from simple housings to function-integrated parts with film hinges. The material costs are significantly lower than those of conventional standard materials, so that the use of the material offers economic advantages for many component groups.


As early as 2013, an elastic TPU material called ROLASERIT® PB for laser sintering was launched on the market as the first material of AM Polymer Research. It is characterized by very good flow behavior and multiple 100% reusability. Processing is possible on all common laser sintering systems. Here no disturbing smoke development occurs, whereby a simple exposure of the hatch is sufficient. The components produced with the material show elongations at break of sometimes more than 500 % and even in z-direction more than 300 %, have very good surface properties and high edge sharpness with good detail resolution. In addition, the hardness that can be produced can be variably adjusted between 70 and 85 Shore A by means of process settings. The components can also be used directly without infiltration and can be easily colored.AM Polymer Research GmbH has thus developed three different thermoplastic powders for laser sintering or powder bed fusion and distributes them under the brand name ROLASERIT®.

A grey-black polyethylene material ROLASERIT® PEGR completes the material range. The material was developed as an entry material for simple, inexpensive prototypes and makes the mass plastic polyethylene available for the laser sintering process. Like the previously developed material, the powder has very good powder flowability. Processing is also simple. The parts exhibit characteristic PE strength values with easily manageable component ductility. Due to the component properties typical for PE with low component hardness, the components can be finished very well.


In addition to the commercialized products, other important standard thermoplastics such as PA6 or PBT are under development for laser sintering. The current state of development already shows promising properties of these future products. In order to be able to react even more flexible to development trends in the future, a production facility with three production lines for powder production and refinement as well as the AM Application Center with an expanded laboratory are currently being built at the Willich site. Within this framework, a powder spherical shaping line will also be set up by the end of 2018. With this system, the properties of the powders produced can be further improved. The machine can be used to refine materials on a several tenth of ton scale.AM Polymer Research GmbH, headquartered in Duisburg, is a spin-off from the University of Duisburg-Essen and was founded in 2014. The company specializes in the development, production and sale of laser sintering materials as well as the development of requirements-oriented materials in the field of additive manufacturing processes. The team of the company can look back on many years of experience in the field of additive manufacturing processes. The founders Dr.-Ing. Andreas Wegner and Prof. Dr.-Ing. habil. Gerd Witt has ten respectively twenty years of experience in laser sintering of plastics. In 2015, the company set up its own AM Application Center with laboratory in Krefeld. Timur Ünlü, a long-time expert in the field of powder production, joined the company in 2018.

In addition to the commercialized products, other important standard thermoplastics such as PA6 or PBT are under development for laser sintering. The current state of development already shows promising properties of these future products. In order to be able to react even more flexible to development trends in the future, a production facility with three production lines for powder production and refinement as well as the AM Application Center with an expanded laboratory are currently being built at the Willich site. Within this framework, a powder spherical shaping line will also be set up by the end of 2018. With this system, the properties of the powders produced can be further improved. The machine can be used to refine materials on a several tenths of a ton scale.

Contact


AM Polymer Research GmbH

Dr.-Ing. Andreas Wegner

Bismarckstraße 120

47057 Duisburg

Deutschland

Tel.: +49 203 306 4880

E-Mail: info@am-polymer-research.de

Homepage: http://www.am-polymer-research.de/

3D Printing News Briefs: November 23, 2018

We’re starting with a little business news in today’s 3D Printing News Briefs – Intech confirmed its first order for Additive Industries’ MetalFAB1 3D printer, and Roboze CEO Alessio Lorusso has won a prestigious Ernst & Young award. Moving on, researchers are working on 3D printable thermoelectric materials that can convert heat from the surrounding environment and convert it into electricity, while an architecture studio has developed a unique concept for a 3D printed, transportable toilet that converts something very different into electricity. Finally, if you’re looking for a unique gift this holiday season, check out Bloomingdale’s, which is working with Twindom and KODAK to offer 3D printed holiday portraits.

Intech Confirms MetalFAB1 Order with Additive Industries

On the last day of formnext 2018, Bangalore-based Intech, a leader in metal 3D printing in India, confirmed its first order of the MetalFAB1 system from Dutch 3D printer manufacturer Additive Industries. This order marks Additive Industries’ expansion into Asia, and will also help Intech accelerate its business. Application and process development and customer support will be handled from the new regional Additive Industries center in Singapore.

Accelerating adoption of additive manufacturing is the primary objective at Intech. Moving from prototyping to series production with focus on cost per part with repeatable quality is the way forward. This is a stepping stone for Intech in achieving its goal to meet the demands of customer requirements of printing large parts with excellent quality,” explained Sridhar Balaram, the CEO of Intech. “Intech has been working with various customers in different industry verticals by identifying parts for mass production as a proof of concept. With Additive Industries’ MetalFAB1 we can now scale for volume. The system is unique in the industry and we are excited to add this to our fleet of equipment.”

Roboze CEO Alessio Lorusso Wins Award from Ernst & Young

Alessio Lorusso

Alessio Lorusso, the CEO and founder of Italian 3D printing company Roboze, was recently awarded the prestigious 2018 Startup Award by Ernst & Young (EY) at its Entrepreneur Of the Year 2018 awards. Established for the first time during the 2015 awards, the Startup Award is awarded for contributing to a major growth of the Italian, and worldwide, economy, and is dedicated to an individual’s ability to create value with a spirit of innovation and a strategic vision. The award aims to make young, bright minds, who create a company from an innovative idea, more visible.

“In 2015, when we presented our first solution to the global market, I could not even imagine to achieve our goals in such a short time. We faced the logics of the machines design for additive manufacturing with clear, real and innovative competitive advantages. The market chooses us because our technology is definitely the best one, as specifically designed and produced to meet the real needs of the manufacturing companies,” said Lorusso. “This award is the result of the entire Roboze team’s hard work and constant commitment; so I want to dedicate this to each member of it. It was hard but we always believed it and this award does confirm that we are following the right way to conquer and revolutionize the whole global market.”

Thermoelectric Materials Converting Heat into Electricity

Flexible thermoelectric device embedded in a glove for generating electricity by body heat. [mage: Dr. Song Yun Cho, Korea Research Institute of Chemical Technology]

According to a review of new research in the Science and Technology of Advanced Materials journal, a team of scientists are working to design thermoelectric materials that can harvest heat from the environment, then convert it into electricity in order to power appliances and devices. Products made with these materials, such as wearable devices, could be more cost-effective, as they won’t need to recharge, change, or dispose of batteries. The team, which published a paper called “Thermoelectric materials and applications for energy harvesting power generation,” is investigating three different types of conducting materials, including inorganic and organic.

The abstract reads, “Thermoelectrics, in particular solid-state conversion of heat to electricity, is expected to be a key energy harvesting technology to power ubiquitous sensors and wearable devices in the future. A comprehensive review is given on the principles and advances in the development of thermoelectric materials suitable for energy harvesting power generation, ranging from organic and hybrid organic–inorganic to inorganic materials. Examples of design and applications are also presented.”

Most organic thermoelectric devices involve polymers, and semiconducting ones are more lightweight and inexpensive, can hold heat better than conventional inorganic semiconductors, and are flexible enough to be 3D printed. Inorganic thermoelectric devices can convert heat into electricity, but aren’t that flexible. The researchers say that while thermoelectric devices could actually replace traditional batteries in many applications someday, a lot more work is required first. Time will only tell with this one.

Spark’s 3D Printed Toilet 

Speaking of electricity, architecture studio Spark has developed an innovative concept for a transportable toilet, made with 3D printed elements, that can actually convert human waste into electricity. Fittingly, the studio launched its Big Arse Toilet on Monday to coincide with World Toilet Day. The module was designed for use in remote villages in India, where the UN is working hard to tackle the sanitation and hygiene issues stemming from open defecation. The toilet elements would be 3D printed from bamboo fibers mixed with biopolymer resin, and the completed module would be anchored to a 3D printed reinterpretation of a traditional biogas dome buried underground, which uses waste to generate and store gas.

Spark told Dezeen, “The Big Arse toilet reinterprets the use and organisation of traditional bio-gas domes to create electricity and gas for those communities that have no access to power networks and utility infrastructure that we take for granted.

“Bio-gas is a product of the breakdown of organic matter, in the case of the Big Arse Toilet the biogas is a product of human waste, food waste and agricultural waste. The biogas can be used directly for activities such as cooking or can be used to drive a micro CHP turbine that converts the gas into electricity.”

Bloomingdale’s Offering Personalized Holiday 3D Printed Portraits

3D body scanning leader Twindom, a brand licensee of Kodak, is offering a unique gift promotion this holiday season to shoppers at the Bloomingdale’s stores in San Francisco and New York City: personalized, 3D printed holiday portraits, made with the KODAK Full Body 3D Scanner until the end of December, just in time for Christmas. Shoppers who want to have a 3D printed portrait made can either make an appointment or just walk in to the store.

Once there, simply enter your information, walk into the KODAK Full Body 3D Scanner, and pose for the scan, which only takes 1⁄4 of a second to complete. Then, review the 3D capture, choose your size – 3 to 14 inches – and place your order, which will be 3D printed in full color and ship in about 1-2 weeks. Pricing starts at around $69 for the 3D printed portraits, and local support at each store location is provided by Twindom’s local partners: PocketMe, PeoplePrints 3D, and Memories in 3D.

Discuss these stories and other 3D printing topics at 3DPrintBoard.com or share your thoughts in the Facebook comments below. 

INTAMSYS launches dual nozzle FUNMAT PRO 410 for all-in-one functional polymer 3D printer

High performance 3D printer materials manufacturer INTAMSYS, headquartered in Shanghai, has released the FUNMAT PRO 410. Termed an “all-in-one” solution, the FUNMAT PRO 410 is designed to work with a diverse selection of materials. Many filaments, from low temperature PLA, through to engineering-grade and high performance polymers like PC, PA, PA+CF and PC, PA, PA+CF […]

CIPRES Introducing New Industrial Dyeing Machine for 3D Printed Parts at formnext

In 2004, coloring process service provider CIPRES Technology Systems was founded by Carlos Prestien; two short years later, the German company branched out and began offering serial production of SLS 3D printed components. Over the years, it’s continued developing color techniques, color units, and solutions for surface finishing. This summer, CIPRES GmbH was formed to take over the original company’s service sector, and also provides coloring and finishing machines for 3D printed components.

At formnext 2018, which opens tomorrow in Frankfurt, CIPRES will be presenting a new industrial dyeing machine: the eCOLOR Type 1/350/1 for 3D printed serial parts and components made out of polymer materials. The company partnered with Thies GmbH & Co. to produce the industrial machine, which was made specifically to treat 3D printed serial components, functional prototypes, and spare parts. The highly productive system offers excellent dyeing results and high reproducibility, in addition to a lower environmental impact and cost.

The new eCOLOR system, which can precisely adapt chemicals and dyes, can run at operating temperatures of up to 140 °C and at maximum 5bar operating pressure. With its user-friendly software and high-tech controller for monitoring each and every step of the process, the system offers what the company calls “perfect process reliability.” The software also helps users define and optimize jobs, according to their application-oriented or technical needs.

The eCOLOR Type 1/350/1 is designed to cover standard production capacities up to 37 liters, and has a packing diameter of 310 mm and packing height of 500 mm. It also has a flexible loading system for small (8 L), medium (19 L) or large (31 L) batch sizes, and all Thies machines comply with safety regulations and pressure vessel codes of various operating sites, such as ASME. In addition, the system’s frequency inverter driven pump allows for an accurate and economic adjustment of the liquor flow and the flow direction, which helps optimize each stage of the dyeing process.

In order to ensure it’s making the strongest products, CIPRES needs the strongest partners, like Thies, which originated in the traditional textiles area of Münsterland, Westphalia over 120 years ago. Together, the two companies are working to complete the product chain in terms of refining 3D printed nylon parts.

“The combination of our complementary expertise in colors, coloring and finishing solutions will open a new chapter in our common history,” CIPRES wrote in a press release. “We will entrance the excellences of this partnership to improve and expand your portfolio.”

In addition to Thies, CIPRES has several other strong partners, such as Additive Manufacturing Technologies (AMT). which offers automated post processing solutions with its complementary PostPro3D technology. CIPRES is also partnering with Swiss specialty chemicals company Archroma, which brings 130 years of color expertise with its soon-to-launch 3D Cosmic range for coloring 3D printed goods, and surface preparation and finishing leader Rösler Oberflächentecknik GmbH. We’re seeing a lot happening in post processing which should bode well for people wanting less expensive better looking 3D printed parts. If we as an industry want to produce high-quality consumer-friendly parts at volume then automation and automated post processing is what will get us there.

Visit CIPRES at formnext this week at booth G38 in Hall 3.1.

What do you think about this news? Discuss this story and other 3D printing topics at 3DPrintBoard.com or share your thoughts in the Facebook comments below. 

[Images provided by CIPRES]

imec Saves Time and Money with New 3D Printed Chip Cooling Solution

One of the world’s top research and innovation hubs in nanoelectronics and digital technologies is imec, headquartered in Leuven, Belgium with additional offices in Japan and India and distributed R&D groups in the US, Taiwan, China, the Netherlands, and at multiple Flemish universities.

A few years ago, the company used inkjet printing to output a transistor logic board with nearly 3,400 circuits, and is well known for its 2015 collaborative project resulting in a 3D printed EEG headset for the purposes of brain-computer interfacing.

The company creates innovation in applications ranging from healthcare, education, and smart cities to mobility, logistics, manufacturing, and energy, thanks to its excellent infrastructure and local and global partner network. Now, imec has turned its attention to efficient cooling solutions…which, if you’re living through a July heat wave like I am at the moment, sounds great. However, I’m not talking about a 3D printed fan, but rather an impingement-based solution for cooling chips at the package level.

The company recently announced that for the first time, it’s demonstrated a cost-effective, 3D printed cooling solution for chips, which is quite an achievement in a world of growing cooling demands for 3D chips and systems.

More and more, high-performance electronic systems are having to learn how to deal with increasing cooling demands. It would be the most efficient to introduce direct cooling on the chip backside, but unfortunately, most existing direct cooling microchannel solutions end up creating a temperature gradient across the surface of the chip.

Typically, conventional solutions combine heat exchangers, which are bonded to heat spreaders and attached to the back of a chip to achieve cooling. All of these parts are connected through thermal interface materials (TIM), which make a strong, fixed thermal resistance; adding more efficient cooling solutions will not overcome this resistance.

An impingement-based cooler with distributed coolant outlets, like the 3D printed one imec has created, is the optimal chip cooling solution, as it places the cooling liquid directly in contact with the chip, spraying liquid perpendicular to the surface of the chip. This helps all of the liquid on the surface is the same temperature, in addition to lowering the amount of contact between the chip and the coolant. But, most of these coolers are not cheap, because they’re silicon-based, and their use processes and nozzle diameters not working with the chip packaging process flow doesn’t help in keeping costs down.

imec’s new impingement chip cooler is more cost-effective, as it uses polymers rather than expensive silicon. The cooler is also a pretty familiar object, as Herman Oprins, a senior engineer at imec, explained:

“Our new impingement chip cooler is actually a 3D printed ‘showerhead’ that sprays the cooling liquid directly onto the bare chip. 3D prototyping has improved in resolution, making it available for realizing microfluidic systems such as our chip cooler. 3D printing enables an application-specific design, instead of using a standard design.”

The cooler’s 3D printed nozzles, made with high-resolution SLA technology, are only 300µm and match the heat map, as 3D printing gives companies the ability to customize pattern designs for these types of objects, in addition to producing complex internal structures. Additionally, production costs and time were decreased because 3D printing makes it possible to fabricate the entire structure in just one part, instead of several.

The 3D printed impingement chip cooler has a higher cooling efficiency – according to imec, the chip has “a temperature increase of less than 15°C per 100W/cm2 for a coolant flow rate of 1 l/min.” Due to its smart internal cooler design, the device has a pressure drop as low as 0.3 bar, and the impingement chip cooler is also much smaller than other solutions; imec says it actually matches the chip package’s footprint, which allows for much more efficient cooling and even a package reduction. The cost-effective chip cooler also performs better than benchmark conventional cooling solutions, which have thermal interface materials that cause temperature increases of 20-50°C.

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[Images: imec]