3D printing

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3D print of a human head

About 3D Printing

History

When did 3D printing start: Evolution from 2D:

Ethics

Looking Towards the Future

4D Printing

4D printing incorporates one more dimension: the function of time. The team dubbed "Self-Assembly Lab"[1] at Massachusetts Institute of Technology collaborated with Stratasys, a major 3D printing manufacturer, and the software corporation Autodesk Inc to develop a custom-built and adaptable technology[2].

As an extension of 3D printing, 4D printing aims to skip the step of assembling the printed material ourselves to having them self-assemble as well as autonomously reshape over time. These programmable materials are created with multi-material 3D printing and their responses to changes in environment (mimicked with simple energy inputs of water, heat, and light), as well as geometric code [3].

Skylar Tibbits, a co-director and founder of Self-Assembly Labs, gave a demonstration of 4D printing at a TED Talk in 2013[4], showing how a single 1D strand dipped in water could proceed to self-fold into the letters 'M I T'.

Concerns

As of now, this adaptive infrastructure [5]