3D Printing Applications

Where Can You Find 3D Printed Parts in Your Daily Life?

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3D printing is not just transforming industries like aerospace, automotive, and turbomachinery; it’s also changing the way we interact with everyday products. From personalized medical devices to fashionable accessories, Additive Manufacturing (AM) is making products more customizable, sustainable, and accessible.

In this article, we’ll explore some of the most common examples of 3D-printed items that you might already encounter in your daily life.

Where Can You Find 3D Printed Parts in Your Daily Life?

Revolutionizing Healthcare with 3D Printing

Dental Aligners

Invisalign Dental Treatment for Alignment. Image source: Invisalign

Custom-fit dental aligners, like those produced by Invisalign, are a prime example of 3D printing’s impact on healthcare. These aligners are created using Binder Jetting (BJT) and Material Extrusion (ME) technologies, offering a precise and comfortable solution for millions of patients each year. Companies like Invisalign alone produce aligners for over 2 million patients annually.

Hearing Aids

3D Printed Hearing Aid. Image source: Sonova International

3D printing has revolutionized the hearing aid industry, enabling the production of custom-fitted devices that enhance comfort and sound quality. Impressively, nearly 100% of all hearing aids consumed worldwide are now manufactured using 3D printing, primarily through Material Extrusion (ME) technologies.

Enhancing Personal Style

Eyeglass Frames

3D Printed Eyewear. Image source: Youmawo

Brands like YOUMAWO are leveraging 3D printing to create customized eyeglass frames. Using Laser Powder Bed Fusion (L-PBF), these frames offer not only a perfect fit but also stylish, on-demand designs, reducing waste and inventory needs.

Footwear

3D Printed Shoes. Image source: Zellerfeld

Global brands such as Adidas and New Balance incorporate Binder Jetting (BJT) to produce advanced shoe soles and insoles, enhancing flexibility, support, and aesthetics. These innovations provide wearers with unmatched comfort and performance.

Jewelry

3D Printed Necklace. Image source: Boltenstern

3D printing empowers jewelry designers to craft unique and personalized pieces. By using technologies like Laser Powder Bed Fusion (L-PBF), designers can create intricate details and tailor designs to individual preferences.

Transforming Housing and Home Decor

3D-Printed Houses

3D Printed House. Image Source: Gira

In recent years, concrete printing has emerged as a groundbreaking application of Binder Jetting (BJT) and other 3D printing technologies. Companies like ICON and Apis Cor are using large-scale 3D printers to construct homes layer by layer. These houses can be built in a fraction of the time and at significantly reduced costs compared to traditional methods, offering a sustainable solution to housing shortages. For example, ICON’s Vulcan printer has been used to construct entire communities of 3D-printed homes in Mexico and the U.S.

Home Decor

3D Printed Chair. Image source: Aeditto

From vases to lamps, 3D printing enables the creation of custom home decor items. Companies like aeditto provide platforms for designing personalized furniture and accessories, produced via Binder Jetting (BJT) or Material Extrusion (ME). These solutions are not only creative but also reduce waste by allowing on-demand manufacturing.

The Future of 3D Printing in Daily Life

3D printing is already making its mark on our daily lives, but what’s next? As the technology evolves, we can expect breakthroughs in sectors like personal electronics, customized nutrition, and on-demand spare parts for household appliances.

Further Slideshows

Training

Increase your 3D Printing knowledge

Would you like to further increase your 3D Printing knowledge?  

You can try out the AM Fundamentals course of the AMPOWER Academy free of charge

Additive Manufacturing Training AM Fundamentals

AM Fundamentals Trial

Understand the most important topics to get started with Additive Manufacturing

Sinter-based AM technologies and process chain

Sinter-based AM - a technology overview

Many different printing technologies - one sintering process

The sinter-based AM (SBAM) technologies have, as the name suggests, the sintering process in common. In this process, the printed green part is consolidated into a dense part and receives its final properties. The green part can be printed in advance using different technologies.They all have in common that metal powder is bound to the desired shape by a binder. The best-known printing technologies include Binder Jetting and Filament Material Extrusion.

In this section, you learn everything about the sinter-based AM  process chain and get an overview of the different printing technologies.

Goal and structure of this course

This course is aimed at engineers, designers and other professionals that are working closely with sinter-based AM technologies. The goal is to cover the most important aspects that will enable engineers and designers to fully grasp the capabilities and technical limitations of the printing technologies and the sintering process to succeed in technology selection and part design. Besides going through the course from the beginning until the end, this course can also act as a constant source of knowledge while working on AM projects. 

The course is structured into the following sections.

This section will start with an overview of the sinter-based AM process chain and its printing technologies, followed by a technology deep dive into the most important aspects of the BJT technology, followed by a closer look at the debinding and sintering step also including sintering simulation .

The second section will provide an overview of the different materials that are available as well as part characteristics that can be achieved with the BJT process and typical methods for quality assurance. Finally, several common defects in the BJT process are presented. 

The last section will act as a guideline for designers. Besides generally describing the process when designing for Additive Manufacturing, actionable restrictions and guidelines for the BJT process are provided. The final section will present several design examples from different industries. 

What you will find in this section

Sinter-based AM process chain

From digital model to finished part

Data preparation

Simulation to compensate the deformation during the sintering step, nesting of parts and definition of printing parameters

Printing

Through various printing processes, different feedstocks such as metal powders, filaments, pellets or dispersions are processed into green parts

Unpacking

Unpacking of fragile green parts needs to be done carefully and is typically a manual process.

Debinding

Debinding describes the process of removing the binder which results in a brown part

Sintering

To reach the structural integrity of a metal part, a sinter process is required. The powder particles fuse together to a coherent, solid structure via a mass transport that occurs at the atomic scale driven via diffusional forces.

The brown part shrinks ~13-21 % in each direction.

The process chain of sinter-based technologies differs from other AM Technologies. Especially the post-printing processes (debinding and sintering) are crucial to achieve the intended mechanical properties.

Technology principle

How does Binder Jetting work?

Binder Jetting is a powder based Additive Manufacturing technology in which a liquid polymer binder is selectively deposited onto the powder bed binding the metal particles and forming a green body.

The metal powder is applied to a build platform in a typical layer thickness of 40 µm to 100 µm. Subsequently a modified 2D print head apply a binder selectively onto the powder bed. Depending on machine technology a hardening or curing process of the binder is performed in parallel for each layer and/or at the end of the whole build. During the in-situ curing process a heat source is used to solidify the binder and form a solid polymer – metal powder composite.

Working Principle of Binder Jetting

Afterwards the build platform moves downward by the amount of one layer thickness and a new layer of powder is applied. Again, the liquid binder is deposited and hardened in the required regions of the next layer to form the green body. This process is repeated until the complete part is printed. After the complete printing process is finished the parts have to be removed from the “powder cake” meaning the surrounding loose but densified powder. To improve the removal of the excess powder from the green body often brushes or a blasting gun with air pressure are used.

To create a dense metal part the 3D printed green body has to be post-processed in a debinding and sintering process. Similar to the metal injection molding process BJT parts are placed in a high temperature furnace, where the binder is burnt out and the remaining metal particles are sintered together. The sintering results in densification of the 3D printed green body to a metal part with high densities of 97 % to 99,5%, dependent of the material.

Printing Technologies

Metal Binder Jetting

Binder Jetting is a powder based Additive Manufacturing technology in which a liquid polymer binder is selectively deposited onto the powder bed binding the metal particles and forming a green body.

The metal powder is applied to a build platform in a typical layer thickness of 40 µm to 100 µm. Subsequently a modified 2D print head apply a binder selectively onto the powder bed. Depending on machine technology a hardening or curing process of the binder is performed in parallel for each layer and/or at the end of the whole build. During the in-situ curing process a heat source is used to solidify the binder and form a solid polymer – metal powder composite.

Working Principle of Binder Jetting

Material Extrusion

Binder Jetting is a powder based Additive Manufacturing technology in which a liquid polymer binder is selectively deposited onto the powder bed binding the metal particles and forming a green body.

The metal powder is applied to a build platform in a typical layer thickness of 40 µm to 100 µm. Subsequently a modified 2D print head apply a binder selectively onto the powder bed. Depending on machine technology a hardening or curing process of the binder is performed in parallel for each layer and/or at the end of the whole build. During the in-situ curing process a heat source is used to solidify the binder and form a solid polymer – metal powder composite.

Working Principle of Binder Jetting

Mold Slurry Deposition

Binder Jetting is a powder based Additive Manufacturing technology in which a liquid polymer binder is selectively deposited onto the powder bed binding the metal particles and forming a green body.

The metal powder is applied to a build platform in a typical layer thickness of 40 µm to 100 µm. Subsequently a modified 2D print head apply a binder selectively onto the powder bed. Depending on machine technology a hardening or curing process of the binder is performed in parallel for each layer and/or at the end of the whole build. During the in-situ curing process a heat source is used to solidify the binder and form a solid polymer – metal powder composite.

Working Principle of Binder Jetting

Metal Selective Laser Sintering

Binder Jetting is a powder based Additive Manufacturing technology in which a liquid polymer binder is selectively deposited onto the powder bed binding the metal particles and forming a green body.

The metal powder is applied to a build platform in a typical layer thickness of 40 µm to 100 µm. Subsequently a modified 2D print head apply a binder selectively onto the powder bed. Depending on machine technology a hardening or curing process of the binder is performed in parallel for each layer and/or at the end of the whole build. During the in-situ curing process a heat source is used to solidify the binder and form a solid polymer – metal powder composite.

Working Principle of Binder Jetting