HOA1&2 - Module 3 - PREHISTORCI ARCHITECTURE OF KERALA.pptx
What is 3D Printer?
1. DEPARTMENT OF INDUSTRIAL ENGINEERING
Student names and ID number:
UMUR OZ 121703002
IE314
MANUFACTURING TECHNOLOGY
PROJECT WORK PART 1
TOPIC NAME: 3D PRINTING
2. CONTENT
INTRODUCTION
HOW DOES 3D PRINTING WORK
GENERAL PRINCIPLES OF 3D PRINTING
TYPES OF 3D PRINTING
MATERIALS USAGE OF 3D PRINTING
PRINTING METHODS
ADVANTAGES AND DISADVANTAGES
CONCLUSION
3. INTRODUCTION
3D printing: Is a process of making three
dimensional solid objects from a digital file. The
creation of a 3D printed object is achieved using
additive processes. In an additive process an object
is created by laying down successive layers of
material until the entire object is created. Each of
these layers can be seen as a thinly sliced
horizontal cross-section of the eventual object. A
3D printer is a type of industrial robot.
4. FUTURE OF 3D PRINTING
It is predicted by some additive manufacturing advocates that
this technological development will change the nature of
commerce, because end users will be able to do much of their
own manufacturing rather than engaging in trade to buy
products from other people and corporations.
3D printers capable of outputting in colour and multiple
materials already exist and will continue to improve to a point
where functional products will be able to be output. With
effects on energy use, waste reduction, customization,
product availability, medicine, art, construction and sciences,
3D printing will change the manufacturing world as we know it.
5. HOW DOES 3D PRINTING WORKS
Modelling
Save (in .stl format)
The CAD information sent to the printer.
The printer forms the item by depositing the
material in layer.
7. MODELLING
3D printable models may be
created with a computer
aided design (CAD)
package, via a 3D scanner
or by a plain digital camera
and photogrammetry
software.
AutoCAD, 3dsMAX,
SolidWork are some of the
(CAD) programs.
8. PRINTING
Before printing a 3D model
from an STL file, it must first
be examined for errors. In
fact, most of the CAD
softwares produced errors
in the STL files: holes, faces
normals, self-intersections,
noise shells or manifold
errors. This step is called
"repair", as the original
model needs to be fixed.
9. FINISHING
Though the printer-
produced resolution is
sufficient for many
applications, printing a
slightly oversized version of
the desired object in
standard resolution and
then removing material with
a higher-resolution
subtractive process can
achieve greater precision.
Some printable polymers
such as ABS, allow the
surface finish to be
smoothed and improved
using chemical vapor
processes.
10. TYPES OF 3D PRINTERS
Industrial Use
Medial Industry
Aerospace & Aviation Industries
Automotive Industry
Consmer Use
Large 3D Printer
Microscale and Nanoscale 3D Printer
11. INDUSTRIAL USE
Additive manufacturing
systems were on the market
that ranged from $200,000 to
$500,000 in price and were
employed in industries
including aerospace,
architecture, automotive,
defense, and medical
replacements, among many
others. For example,
General Electric uses the
high-end model to build parts
for turbines. Many of these
systems are used for rapid
prototyping, before mass
production methods are
employed.
12.
13. MEDICAL INDUSTRY
3D-printable prosthetics are
changing the face of medicine,
as engineers and physicians
are able to develop prosthetics
that are fully customized to the
wearer. Consumer 3D printing
is leading to an even bigger
revolution
Where organs and body parts
are built using inkjet
techniques. Layers of living
cells are deposited onto a gel
medium and slowly built up to
form three dimensional
structures.
14. AEROSPACE & AVIATION INDUSTRIES
NASA for instance
prints combustion
chamber liners using
selective laser melting
and as of march 2015
the FAA cleared GE
Aviation’s first 3D
printed jet engine
part to fly: a laser
sintered housing for a
compressor inlet
temperature sensor.
15. AUTOMOTIVE INDUSTRY
Although the automotive industry was
among the earliest adopters of 3D
printing it has for decades relegated
3d printing technology to low volume
prototyping applications.
Nowadays the use of 3D printing in
automotive is evolving from relatively
simple concept models for fit and
finish checks and design verification,
to functional parts that are used in
test vehicles, engines, and platforms.
The expectations are that 3D printing
in the automotive industry will
generate a combined $1.1 billion
dollars by 2019.
16.
17. CONSUMER USE
Several projects and companies
are making efforts to develop
affordable 3D printers for home
desktop use. Much of this work has
been driven by and targeted at
DIY/Maker/enthusiast/early adopter
communities, with additional ties to
the academic and hacker
communities.
18.
19. LARGE 3D PRINTER
Large 3D printers have been developed for
industrial, education, and demonstrative
uses. The printer is capable of making an
object with diameter of up to 4 feet (1.2 m)
and up to 10 feet (3.0 m) in height. It also
uses plastic pellets as the raw material
instead of the typical plastic filaments used
in other 3D printers.
Another type of large printer is Big Area
Additive Manufacturing (BAAM). The goal is
to develop printers that can produce a large
object in high speed. A BAAM machine of
Cincinnati Incorporated can produce an
object at the speeds 200-500 times faster
than typical 3D printers available in 2014.
Another BAAM machine is being developed
by Lockheed Martin with an aim to print
long objects of up to 100 feet (30 m) to be
used in aerospace industries.
20.
21. MICROSCALE AND NANOSCALE 3D PRINTER
Microelectronic device fabrication
methods can be employed to perform
the 3D printing of nanoscale-size
objects. Such printed objects are
typically grown on a solid substrate, e.g.
silicon wafer, to which they adhere after
printing as they're too small and fragile
to be manipulated post-construction.
In one technique, 3D nanostructures
can be printed by physically moving a
dynamic stencil mask during the
material deposition process, somewhat
analogous to the extrusion method of
traditional 3D printers.
22. MATERIAL USAGE OF 3D PRINTER
Standard Filaments
Flexible Filaments
Composite Filaments
Speciality Filaments
Support Filaments
24. PLA
PLA is useful in a broad range of printing
applications, has the virtue of being both odorless
and low-warp, and does not require a heated bed.
25. ABS
Best used for making durable parts that need to
withstand higher temperatures. ABS plastic is less
‘brittle’.
26. PET
PET (Polyethylene terephthalate) is an industrial
strength filament with several great features. It's
strength is much higher than PLA, it is FDA
approved for food containers and tools used for
food consumptionit is 100% reclaimable.
28. TPE
TPE filament can be used to make parts that can
bend or must flex to fit their environment - stoppers,
belts, springs, phone cases and more.
29. TPU
TPU Plastic has several applicable uses including
automotive instrument panels, caster wheels,
power tools, sporting goods, medical devices and
also it is also commonly used in mobile phone
cases.
31. LAYBRICK
LAYBRICK is a 3D printing material that gives parts
the look and feel of grey stone while retaining the
resiliency of plastic, making it ideal for landscape
and architectural designs.
32. LAYWOO-D3
LAYWOO-D3 is a wood-like 3D printer material that
gives 3D printed objects the look and feel of
fiberboard. It also imbues parts with other wood-like
attributes, such as the ability be cut, painted, and
sanded. LAYWOO-D3 is made from a combination
of recycled wood particles.
33. LAYCERAMIC
LayCeramic filament is exactly what it sounds like,
clay engineered for 3D Printers that can be used to
make ceramic objects. LayCeramic has all the
capabilities of normal clay including the ability to be
fired to give it a nice glossy look and increase
strength.
34. PRINTING METHODS
Vat Photopolymerisation
Material Jetting
Binder Jetting
Material Extrusion, Powder Bed Fusion and etc.
35. VAT PHOTOPOLYMERISATION
A 3D printer based on the
Vat Photopolymerisation
method has a container
filled with photopolymer
resin which is then
hardened with UV light
source.
36. MATERIAL JETTING
In this process, material is
applied in droplets through
a small diameter nozzle,
similar to the way a
common inkjet paper printer
works, but it is applied
layer-by-layer to a build
platform making a 3D object
and then hardened by UV
light.
37. MATERIAL EXTRUSION
The most commonly used
technology in this process is
Fused deposition modeling
(FDM).
The FDM technology works
using a plastic filament or
metal wire which is
unwound from a coil and
supplying material to an
extrusion nozzle which can
turn the flow on and off. The
nozzle is heated to melt the
material and can be moved
in both horizontal and
vertical directions by a
numerically controlled
mechanism.
39. THE ADVANTAGES OF 3D PRINTING
1. Ability to customize products
2. Rapid production of prototypes
3. Low cost of production
4. No storage cost
5. Increased employment opportunities
6. Quick availability of organs
40. THE DISADVANTAGES OF 3D PRINTING
1. Intellectual property issues
2. Unchecked production of dangerous items
3. Limitations of size
4. Limitations of raw material
5. Cost of printers
6. Bad quality (depends on 3d Printer)
41. CONCLUSION
3D printing is presently gaining lots of attention in the press as
a new technology, but what does the technology landscape
look like through a patent landscape analysis? It is important
to comprehend the fact that the term “3D printing” can be
considered an umbrella term for a number of related
technologies that can be used to produce 3D objects.
The fact that there is patent data from this era which is still
relevant to this field of technology, is illustrative of the fact that
this technology has existed in many forms for some time, and
that it is only recently with advances in computing and
software combined with large amounts of media interest, (plus
the expiration of a number of useful patents) that has led to
the current status regarding this technology.
42. QUESTIONS ABOUT 3D PRINTER
Modelling;
3D printable models may be created with a
computer aided design (CAD) package, via a 3D
scanner or by a plain digital camera and
photogrammetry software. AutoCAD, 3dsMAX,
SolidWork are some of the (CAD) programs.
Printing;
Before printing a 3D model from an STL file, it must
first be examined for errors. In fact, most of the
CAD softwares produced errors in the STL files:
holes, faces normals, self-intersections, noise
shells or manifold errors. This step is called
"repair", as the original model needs to be fixed.
Finishing;
Though the printer-produced resolution is sufficient
for many applications, printing a slightly oversized
version of the desired object in standard resolution
and then removing material with a higher-resolution
subtractive process can achieve greater precision.
Some printable polymers such as ABS, allow the
surface finish to be smoothed and improved using
chemical vapor processes.
Industrial Use
Medial Industry
Aerospace & Aviation Industries
Automotive Industry
Consmer Use
Large 3D Printer
Microscale and Nanoscale 3D Printer
1.How 3d Printer Work?
2. Determine the types of 3d
Printer? (Explain briefly)