3D printing goes back to the Stone Age

3Dceramics.jpg

This is really cool. According to ScienceDaily, group of researchers at University of Washington have come up with a formulation of artist's ceramic powder to replace 3D printing media, which can cost $30-50 per pound. They are distributing their recipe online for free (which can produce a pound of material for less than a dollar). The pots pictured above were made in a 3D printer using their ceramic mix.

About five years ago, Mark Ganter, a UW mechanical engineering professor and longtime practitioner of 3-D printing, became frustrated with the high cost of commercial materials and began experimenting with his own formulas. He and his students gradually developed a home-brew approach, replacing a proprietary mix with artists' ceramic powder blended with sugar and maltodextrin, a nutritional supplement. The results are printed in a recent issue of Ceramics Monthly. Co-authors are Duane Storti, UW associate professor of mechanical engineering, and Ben Utela, a former UW doctoral student.

The formula the team is using can be found in this article in Ceramics Monthly.


3-D Printing Hits Rock-bottom Prices With Homemade Ceramics Mix [Thanks, Alberto!]


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Posted by: Sherman Hall on June 4, 2009 at 7:33 AM

Article link moved

We have updated our website, and the link to the article is actually here:
http://ceramicartsdaily.org/methods-techniques/the-printed-pot/
Enjoy!
Sherman Hall, Editor, Ceramics Monthly magazine.


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