Evaluation of 3D Printing and Its Potential Impact on
Biotechnology and the Chemical Sciences
PART 3
Table 1 addresses
the principle, materials, solvent compatibility, resolution, cost, and
applications associated with the five 3D printing techniques discussed above.
Table 1. Comparison of 3D Printing Methods
|
method
|
principle
|
materials
|
solvent
compatibility
|
resolution
(XY/Z) (μm)
|
cost
(USD)
|
applications
[ref]
|
|
SLA
|
UV
initiated curing of defined photoresin layers
|
Epoxy
or acrylate based resins with proprietary photoinitiators, support material
is mix of propy-lene/polyethylene glycols, glycerin, and/or acrylate
|
Most
polymer materials can absorb small organic molecules and can absorb organic
or aqueous solvents resulting in swelling of the bulk material
|
Formlabs
Forml 3 299; 3D Systems
ProX 950: >500 000
|
||
|
Inkjet
|
Powder-liquid
binding; Polyjet technology (hybrid between SLA and Inkjet) allows inkjet
printing of photoresins
|
Photoresins
or more commonly, plaster powder particles
(50–100 μm in diameter)
|
Most
polymer materials can absorb small organic molecules and can absorb organic
or aqueous solvents resulting in swelling of the bulk material
|
20–50/50;
|
3D
Systems Zcorp Zprinter 150: 16 580, 650: 59 000, 850: 93 000; Stratasys
(polyjet) Objet 30: 55 660, Objet 24: 19 900
|
|
|
SLS
|
Laser
induced heating of powder particles
|
Powdered
PC, PVC, ABS, nylon, resin, polyester, metals, ceramic powders
|
Most
polymer materials can absorb small organic molecules and can absorb organic
or aqueous solvents resulting in swelling of the bulk material
|
50/1–2;
|
3D
Systems: 250–450 000
|
|
|
FDM
|
Extrusion
of molten thermoplastics
|
Wax
blends, PC, PS, ABS, nylon, metals/ceramics (with binder)
|
Most
polymer materials can absorb small organic molecules and can absorb organic
or aqueous solvents resulting in swelling of the bulk material
|
250/50;
|
Stratasys
Mojo: 9 900, Dimension:
34 900, UPrint: 20 900; Makerbot
Replicator 2 000
|
|
|
LOM
|
Laser/razor
cutting of heated, adhesive coated sheet material
|
Adhesive-coated
polymer, paper, cellulose, metal sheets
|
Paper
or cellulose may not be amenable to some chemical applications
|
10/100;
|
Cubic
Technologies 14 995
|
Solvent compatibility for 3D printer materials is still under
exploration; however, polymer reactivity, as well as the other mentioned
materials’ reactivities, with aqueous and organic solvents are generally known
and well documented. It is anticipated that as techniques and materials become
more popular in the chemical and biochemical community, solvent compatibility
will become less of a variable in such studies. In the methods that require a
laser, resolution is determined not only by the laser spot size but also by the
physical properties of the materials that govern the polymerization (SLA) or
the thermal heating and cooling (SLS and LOM). Resolutions in the other
mentioned techniques are limited by a material’s cooling properties (FDM),
viscosity, and nozzle diameter. Printer costs were obtained by contacting the
listed company for quotes, and printer brand name and model name are provided,
if possible. Desktop printers that may be lacking in terms of resolution are
generally <$10,000 while midtier printers can cost up to $100,000. Printers
for industrial use, high resolution, or for high throughput printing can cost
$250,000 or more. These price points are estimates of the market prices.
Department of Chemistry, Michigan State University, 578 South
Shaw Lane, East Lansing, Michigan 48824, United States
Anal. Chem., 2014, 86 (7), pp
3240–3253
CONTINUES
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