(Press-News.org) Contact information: Marcia Goodrich
mlgoodri@mtu.edu
906-487-2343
Michigan Technological University
Scientists build a low-cost, open-source 3-D metal printer
Key ingredients are steel, a MIG welder, and a microcontroller
OK, so maybe you aren't interested in making your own toys, cellphone cases, or glow-in-the-dark Christmas decorations. How about a brake drum?
Until now, 3D printing has been a polymer affair, with most people in the maker community using the machines to make all manner of plastic consumer goods, from tent stakes to chess sets. A new low-cost 3D printer developed by Michigan Technological University's Joshua Pearce and his team could add hammers to that list. The detailed plans, software and firmware are all freely available and open-source, meaning anyone can use them to make their own metal 3D printer.
Pearce is the first to admit that his new printer is a work in progress. So far, the products he and his team have produced are no more intricate than a sprocket. But that's because the technology is so raw. "Similar to the incredible churn in innovation witnessed with open-sourcing of the first RepRap plastic 3D printers, I anticipate rapid progress when the maker community gets their hands on it," says Pearce, an associate professor of materials science and engineering/electrical and computer engineering. "Within a month, somebody will make one that's better than ours, I guarantee it."
Using under $1,500 worth of materials, including a small commercial MIG welder and an open-source microcontroller, Pearce's team built a 3D metal printer than can lay down thin layers of steel to form complex geometric objects. Commercial metal printers are available, but they cost over half a million dollars.
His make-it-yourself metal printer is less expensive than off-the-shelf commercial plastic 3D printers and is affordable enough for home use, he said. However, because of safety concerns, Pearce suggests that for now it would be better off in the hands of a shop, garage or skilled DIYer, since it requires more safety gear and fire protection equipment than the typical plastic 3D printer.
While metal 3D printing opens new vistas, it also raises anew the specter of homemade firearms. Some people have already made guns with both commercial metal and plastic 3D printers, with mixed results. While Pearce admits to some sleepless nights as they developed the metal printer, he also believes that the good to come from all types of distributed manufacturing with 3D printing will far outweigh the dangers.
In previous work, his group has already shown that making products at home with a 3D printer is cheaper for the average American and that printing goods at home is greener than buying commercial goods.
In particular, expanded 3D printing would benefit people in the developing world, who have limited access to manufactured goods, and researchers, who can radically cut costs of scientific equipment to further their science, Pearce said. "Small and medium-sized enterprises would be able to build parts and equipment quickly and easily using downloadable, free and open-source designs, which could revolutionize the economy for the benefit of the many."
"I really don't know if we are mature enough to handle it," he added cautiously, "but I think that with open-source approach, we are within reach of a Star Trek-like, post-scarcity society, in which 'replicators' can create a vast array of objects on demand, resulting in wealth for everyone at very little cost. Pretty soon, we'll be able to make almost anything."
The work is described in "A Low-Cost, Open-Source Metal 3-D Printer," to be published Nov. 25 in IEEE Access (DOI: 10.1109/ACCESS.2013.2293018). The coauthors in the Michigan Tech Open Sustainability Lab are Gerald C. Anzalone, a lab supervisor and research scientist in Michigan Tech's Department of Materials Science and Engineering; Chenlong Zhang and Bas Wijnen, PhD candidates in materials science and engineering at Michigan Tech; Paul Sanders, an assistant professor of materials science and engineering; and Pearce.
INFORMATION:
Scientists build a low-cost, open-source 3-D metal printer
Key ingredients are steel, a MIG welder, and a microcontroller
2013-12-03
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Specific heart contractions could predict atrial fibrillation
2013-12-03
Specific heart contractions could predict atrial fibrillation
UCSF-led team identifies potential new risk factor for cardiovascular patients
A commonly used heart monitor may be a simple tool for predicting the risk of atrial fibrillation, the most ...
Burmese python genome reveals extreme adaptation
2013-12-03
Burmese python genome reveals extreme adaptation
Offers key insights into nature of evolution
AURORA, Colo. (Dec. 2, 2013) – Scientists from the University of Colorado School of Medicine who sequenced the genome of the Burmese python have discovered large ...
New study sheds light on the functional importance of dinosaur beaks
2013-12-03
New study sheds light on the functional importance of dinosaur beaks
Beaks are a typical hallmark of modern birds and can be found in a huge variety of forms and shapes. However, it is less well known that keratin-covered beaks had already evolved in ...
A single spray of oxytocin improves brain function in children with autism
2013-12-03
A single spray of oxytocin improves brain function in children with autism
A single dose of the hormone oxytocin, delivered via nasal spray, has been shown to enhance brain activity while processing social information in children with autism spectrum disorders, Yale School ...
Secrets to 'extreme adaptation' found in Burmese python genome
2013-12-03
Secrets to 'extreme adaptation' found in Burmese python genome
The Burmese python's ability to ramp up its metabolism and enlarge its organs to swallow and digest prey whole can be traced to unusually rapid evolution and specialized adaptations of its ...
Mount Sinai study: Age-related cognitive decline linked to energy in synapses in prefrontal cortex
2013-12-03
Mount Sinai study: Age-related cognitive decline linked to energy in synapses in prefrontal cortex
Hormone-replacement therapy may prevent age-related declines in cognitive functioning
New York, NY – New York, ...
Researchers revise Darwin's thinking on invasive species
2013-12-03
Researchers revise Darwin's thinking on invasive species
Model points way to better understanding chances of invaders succeeding
PULLMAN, Wash.-For more than a century and a half, researchers interested in invasive species have looked to Charles Darwin and what has ...
Stanford engineers show how to optimize carbon nanotube arrays for use in hot spots
2013-12-03
Stanford engineers show how to optimize carbon nanotube arrays for use in hot spots
Experimental evidence and computer simulations suggest how to grow structures with the best trade offs between 3 desired characteristics: strength, flexibility and the ability to ...
What makes the deadliest form of malaria specific to people?
2013-12-03
What makes the deadliest form of malaria specific to people?
The biological interactions that make some malaria parasites specific to host species
Researchers have discovered why the parasite that causes the deadliest form of malaria only infects ...
Arctic study shows key marine food web species at risk from increasing CO2
2013-12-03
Arctic study shows key marine food web species at risk from increasing CO2
A research expedition to the Arctic, as part of the Catlin Arctic Survey, has revealed that tiny crustaceans, known as copepods, that live just beneath the ocean surface are likely to battle ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Popular cooking cheese made with peas yields same taste and texture
Dr. Julia Dallman awarded SynGAP Research Fund (SRF) grant for SYNGAP1 research targeting gastro-intestinal treatment development
Benzoporphyrin gold complex: a breakthrough in organic conductive materials
Revolutionary van der Waals open frameworks: a new era in porous materials
“Significant proportion” of world’s rural population missing from global estimates, says study
Genetic study reveals hidden chapter in human evolution
New AI tool visualizes a cell’s ‘social network’ to help treat cancer
New ‘shy’ fungus found in old-growth forest
Some nicotine pouch flavors much more addictive than others
Low doses of antibiotic work just as well as higher ones to treat rare type of chronic hair loss
Social media pressures could make friendship a full-time job
CD2AP and Alzheimer’s disease: A key regulator of neurodegeneration and potential therapeutic target
Maternal infection disrupts newborn brain development: A link to neurodevelopmental disorders
inait announces collaboration with Microsoft to deploy novel AI based on digital brains across industries
The Open Brain Institute announces the dawn of a new frontier in neuroscience
Helicobacter pylori treatment practices in the Asia-Pacific region
Nearly one in ten unsure if they have Long Covid
Scientists unlock new dimension in light manipulation, ushering a new era in photonic technology
Current antivirals likely less effective against severe infection caused by bird flu virus in cows’ milk
Lassa fever vaccine enters phase 1 clinical trial
Institute for Healthcare Improvement Honors Hebrew SeniorLife’s Orchard Cove and NewBridge on the Charles
Dialing in the temperature needed for precise nuclear timekeeping
Fewer than half of Medicaid managed care plans provide all FDA-approved medications for alcohol use disorder
Mount Sinai researchers specific therapy that teaches patients to tolerate stomach and body discomfort improved functional brain deficits linked to visceral disgust that can cause of food avoidance in
New ACP guideline recommends combination therapy for acute episodic migraines
Last supper of 15-million-year-old freshwater fish
Slow, silent ‘scream’ of epithelial cells detected for first time
How big brains and flexible skulls led to the evolution of modern birds
Iguanas floated one-fifth of the way around the world to colonize Fiji
‘Audible enclaves’ could enable private listening without headphones
[Press-News.org] Scientists build a low-cost, open-source 3-D metal printerKey ingredients are steel, a MIG welder, and a microcontroller