PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Researchers highlight promise of biochar composites for sustainable 3D printing

2026-02-25
(Press-News.org) A new review of emerging research suggests that biochar, a carbon-rich material produced from biomass, could play an important role in making 3D printing more sustainable while improving material performance. The study brings together recent advances in biochar–polymer composites and outlines the scientific and engineering challenges that must be solved before the technology can be widely adopted.

Biochar is produced when plant material or organic waste is heated in low-oxygen conditions, creating a porous and stable carbon material. While biochar has long been studied for environmental applications such as soil improvement and pollutant removal, scientists are increasingly exploring its use as a filler in plastics used for additive manufacturing.

“Biochar offers a unique opportunity to replace a portion of petroleum-based polymers with a renewable material while also tuning the properties of printed products,” said one of the study’s authors. “It allows us to think about additive manufacturing not only as a design tool but also as a pathway toward more sustainable materials.”

The review examines how adding small amounts of biochar to polymers can enhance certain mechanical and thermal properties. In some cases, low concentrations improved strength or stiffness by helping the polymer matrix interact with the porous biochar surface. Because biochar is lightweight and relatively inexpensive, it may also help reduce material costs and overall environmental impact.

However, the authors note that the benefits depend strongly on how the biochar is produced and processed. Feedstock type, pyrolysis temperature, and post-treatment methods all influence particle size, surface area, and chemical composition. These factors determine how well the biochar mixes with polymers and how it behaves during printing.

One of the main challenges highlighted in the review is printability. Unlike polymers, biochar does not melt, which means particles can aggregate or block printer nozzles if their size and dispersion are not carefully controlled. Poor bonding between printed layers can also weaken final parts.

“Achieving reliable printing performance requires balancing biochar content with particle size, dispersion, and printing parameters,” the authors explained. “There is no single recipe yet, which is why systematic studies linking biochar properties to printing behavior are urgently needed.”

The review also points to promising strategies to overcome these limitations. Physical treatments such as ball milling can reduce particle size and improve dispersion, while chemical modifications can tailor surface chemistry. Adjustments to printing parameters such as infill density, temperature, and raster orientation can further improve final material performance.

Beyond mechanical properties, biochar composites may enable additional functions. Some studies have shown improved electrical conductivity, reduced gas permeability, or enhanced pollutant adsorption in printed materials. These multifunctional characteristics could open new applications in packaging, electronics, environmental monitoring, and construction.

The authors emphasize that research on 3D-printed biochar composites remains at an early stage, but the rapid growth of interest suggests significant potential.

“Our goal was to map out what is known and identify where the biggest knowledge gaps remain,” the authors said. “If we can better connect biochar production methods with printing outcomes, we may be able to design truly sustainable materials tailored for additive manufacturing.”

As industries search for lower-carbon manufacturing approaches, the integration of renewable carbon materials like biochar into 3D printing could represent a promising step toward greener production technologies.

 

=== 

Journal Reference: Day, R., Han, N., Adhikari, S. et al. Biochar–polymer composites for 3D printing: a review. Biochar 8, 18 (2026).   

https://doi.org/10.1007/s42773-025-00520-9   

=== 

About Biochar

Biochar (e-ISSN: 2524-7867) is the first journal dedicated exclusively to biochar research, spanning agronomy, environmental science, and materials science. It publishes original studies on biochar production, processing, and applications—such as bioenergy, environmental remediation, soil enhancement, climate mitigation, water treatment, and sustainability analysis. The journal serves as an innovative and professional platform for global researchers to share advances in this rapidly expanding field. 

Follow us on Facebook, X, and Bluesky.  

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Machine learning helps design low-cost biochar to fight phosphorus pollution in lakes

2026-02-25
Excess phosphorus in lakes and reservoirs fuels harmful algal blooms, threatens drinking water safety, and damages aquatic ecosystems worldwide. Now, researchers have developed a new machine learning–guided strategy to design advanced biochar materials that remove phosphorus efficiently while dramatically lowering treatment costs. The study provides a practical pathway for restoring eutrophic waters at large scale. Phosphorus concentrations above very small thresholds can trigger ecosystem disruption and toxic algal blooms, making removal ...

Urine tests confirm alcohol consumption in wild African chimpanzees

2026-02-25
Aleksey Maro knows far more than he cares to know about the urination habits of chimpanzees. But if you want to measure the alcohol intake of chimps in a Ugandan rain forest, where a breathalyzer is impractical, collecting urine for analysis is your only choice. Last year, Maro and adviser Robert Dudley, UC Berkeley professor of integrative biology, documented that the fruits chimps eat in the wild contain enough alcohol from fermentation to provide around 14 grams per day — the equivalent of two standard drinks. But the proof is in the urine. To perfect his urine sampling techniques, Maro, a UC Berkeley graduate student, worked alongside Sharifah ...

Barshop Institute to receive up to $38 million from ARPA-H, anchoring UT San Antonio as a national leader in aging and healthy longevity science

2026-02-25
SAN ANTONIO, Feb. 24, 2026 – Positioning The University of Texas at San Antonio as a national anchor for aging and longevity science, its Sam and Ann Barshop Institute for Longevity and Aging Studies will receive up to $38 million in federal funding for the first nationwide clinical study in healthy longevity. The Advanced Research Projects Agency for Health (ARPA-H), an agency of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, announced the contract to the Barshop Institute at UT Health San Antonio, the academic health center of UT San Antonio, cementing its standing as the nation’s leading authority in longevity science. The first-of-its-kind study will evaluate ...

Anion-cation synergistic additives solve the "performance triangle" problem in zinc-iodine batteries

2026-02-25
A reserach team led by Professor Huang Zhang at Harbin University of Science and Technology recently made significant progress in the research of zinc-iodine aqueous batteries. They proposed an electrolyte additive strategy based on tetramethylammonium iodide (TMAI), which, through the synergistic effect of anions (I-) and cations (TMA+), simultaneously solved three core challenges in zinc-iodine batteries: sluggish iodine reaction kinetics, polyiodide shuttle effect, and zinc dendrite growth. This research not only achieved ...

Ancient diets reveal surprising survival strategies in prehistoric Poland

2026-02-25
An international team of archaeologists and scientists has reconstructed the diets of prehistoric communities from north-central Poland, shedding new light on how people adapted to changing environments and shifting social landscapes over three millennia between the Neolithic and the Bronze Age. The researchers analysed human remains from 60 individuals, dated between around 4100 and 1230 BC. This long timespan encompassed key periods of Central European prehistory, including the arrival of groups with steppe ancestry from the East and the first widespread use of millet in the region. Archaeological traces of these societies are often scarce: their lightly built ...

Pre-pregnancy parental overweight/obesity linked to next generation’s heightened fatty liver disease risk

2026-02-25
Pre-pregnancy parental overweight and obesity is linked to the next generation’s heightened risk of developing fatty liver disease, a potential precursor to cirrhosis and liver failure, suggests research published online in the journal Gut.   If both parents are overweight or obese before they conceive, that child’s subsequent odds of developing MASLD by the age of 24 are more than 3 times higher, most of which is influenced by cumulative excess weight (BMI) during childhood, the findings indicate.   Non-alcoholic fatty liver disease, recently renamed metabolic dysfunction associated steatotic liver disease, or MASLD ...

Obstructive sleep apnoea may cost UK + US economies billions in lost productivity

2026-02-25
Untreated obstructive sleep apnoea may be costing the UK and US economies billions of pounds/dollars in lost productivity every year, with a considerable proportion of working age adults experiencing symptoms indicative of the breathing disorder, suggests an analysis published online in the journal Thorax.   Around 1 in 5 adults in both countries may have obstructive sleep apnoea, the analysis suggests. And the time has now come to trial workplace screening in those most at risk of harm from the daytime sleepiness associated ...

Guidelines set new playbook for pediatric clinical trial reporting

2026-02-25
Researchers at The Hospital for Sick Children (SickKids), working with international collaborators and youth and family caregivers, have developed a child- and youth-centred global standard for reporting paediatric randomized controlled trials (RCTs) protocols and final reports. Co-published today in The BMJ, JAMA Pediatrics and The Lancet Child & Adolescent Health, the SPIRIT-Children and Adolescents (SPIRIT-C) 2026 and CONSORT-Children and Adolescents (CONSORT-C) 2026 guidelines introduce new recommendations to improve ...

Adolescent cannabis use may follow the same pattern as alcohol use

2026-02-25
A new study published in the journal Addiction shows that cannabis use among Swedish adolescents appears to follow the same population-level pattern previously observed for alcohol. The findings suggest that changes in average cannabis use among young people are reflected across the entire group—from those who use infrequently to those who use frequently. The study is based on extensive data from the Swedish Council for Information on Alcohol and Other Drugs’ (CAN) national school surveys and includes more than 250,000 students aged 15-18 years (in grade ...

Lifespan-extending treatments increase variation in age at time of death

2026-02-25
A key goal in ageing research is not just to extend life, but to ensure more people live longer and healthier lives with less variation in age-at-death; a concept known as “squaring the survival curve.” Using a recent meta-analysis, Dr Tahlia Fulton and Associate Professor Alistair Senior from the University of Sydney School of Life and Environmental Sciences re-examined how dietary restriction and two related drugs, rapamycin and metformin, affect variation in age-at-death in vertebrates. While two of the treatments increased average lifespan, all three increased variance. This means current lifespan-extending interventions do not "square ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Microalgae-derived biochar enables fast, low-cost detection of hydrogen peroxide

Researchers highlight promise of biochar composites for sustainable 3D printing

Machine learning helps design low-cost biochar to fight phosphorus pollution in lakes

Urine tests confirm alcohol consumption in wild African chimpanzees

Barshop Institute to receive up to $38 million from ARPA-H, anchoring UT San Antonio as a national leader in aging and healthy longevity science

Anion-cation synergistic additives solve the "performance triangle" problem in zinc-iodine batteries

Ancient diets reveal surprising survival strategies in prehistoric Poland

Pre-pregnancy parental overweight/obesity linked to next generation’s heightened fatty liver disease risk

Obstructive sleep apnoea may cost UK + US economies billions in lost productivity

Guidelines set new playbook for pediatric clinical trial reporting

Adolescent cannabis use may follow the same pattern as alcohol use

Lifespan-extending treatments increase variation in age at time of death

From ancient myths to ‘Indo-manga’: Artists in the Global South are reframing the comic

Putting some ‘muscle’ into material design

House fires release harmful compounds into the air

Novel structural insights into Phytophthora effectors challenge long-held assumptions in plant pathology

Q&A: Researchers discuss potential solutions for the feedback loop affecting scientific publishing

A new ecological model highlights how fluctuating environments push microbes to work together

Chapman University researcher warns of structural risks at Grand Renaissance Dam putting property and lives in danger

Courtship is complicated, even in fruit flies

Columbia announces ARPA-H contract to advance science of healthy aging

New NYUAD study reveals hidden stress facing coral reef fish in the Arabian Gulf

36 months later: Distance learning in the wake of COVID-19

Blaming beavers for flood damage is bad policy and bad science, Concordia research shows

The new ‘forever’ contaminant? SFU study raises alarm on marine fiberglass pollution

Shorter early-life telomere length as a predictor of survival

Why do female caribou have antlers?

How studying yeast in the gut could lead to new, better drugs

Chemists thought phosphorus had shown all its cards. It surprised them with a new move

A feedback loop of rising submissions and overburdened peer reviewers threatens the peer review system of the scientific literature

[Press-News.org] Researchers highlight promise of biochar composites for sustainable 3D printing