Explore the future of 3D printing: smarter, faster, and more precise technology solving challenges like material waste and quality issues.
Interesting Engineering on MSN
US scientists test heat-treated 3D-printed steels for next-gen nuclear reactors
The US researchers investigated nuclear reactor-grade steels made with a 3D printing process called laser powder bed fusion.
Budding surgeons may soon train on stretchy, lifelike 3D-printed skin that oozes out blood and pus when cut.
Filament-based 3D printers are remarkably wasteful. If you buy a kilogram of filament from your favorite supplier, the odds are that it will come wrapped around a plastic spool weighing about 250 ...
10hon MSN
3D bioprinting advances enable creation of artificial blood vessels with layered structures
To explore possible treatments for various diseases, either animal models or human cell cultures are usually used first; ...
Tech Xplore on MSN
3D printed parts now match digital designs more closely with new modeling technique
People are increasingly turning to software to design complex material structures like airplane wings and medical implants. But as design models become more capable, our fabrication techniques haven't ...
Interesting Engineering on MSN
3D-print record: 14-ingredient meal cooked by lasers sets new culinary milestone
A research team in the US has achieved a massive breakthrough by 3D-printing a 14-ingredient, three-course meal using a ...
1 See Satish Nambisan, “Platforms for Collaboration,” Stanford Social Innovation Review, vol. 7, no. 3, 2009, and John Kania and Mark Kramer, “Collective Impact ...
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