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Fracktal Works | 3D Printing and Sustainable development

D printing is often viewed as one of the key sustainable technologies, primarily due to two benefits: it facilitates more efficient designs and creates less waste.

By Peer Tehleel ManzoorPublished 3 years ago 3 min read
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Bengaluru : 3D printing is changing the outlook of contemporary life, and the technology is being adopted by both hobbyists and experts alike. Opening up new innovative potential possibilities, individuals involved with 3D printing are making home utensils, show-stopping modern art, parts for industrial equipment, prosthetics, and that’s only the tip of the iceberg. It’s getting utilized in the assembly line to make medical equipment and the automotive industry. There is a burgeoning concern about the renewability and sustainability of crude materials. So it’s essential to find a way to initiate the management of waste material.

Modern-day 3D printers adopt a layered strategy for printing objects. They set down layer after layer of material with absolute accuracy to make precisely crafted products and prototypes.

There are numerous kinds of 3D printers:

Fused Deposition Modelling (FDM) uses an additive manufacturing process for modeling and prototyping.

PolyJet Photopolymer that creates realistic prototypes.

Selective Laser Sintering (SLS) uses an additive manufacturing process with lasers.

Stereolithography (SLA) uses a photopolymerization process. The waste generated from 3D Printing

It’s no secret, 3D printing produces a great deal of waste. Making new items requires experiencing multiple iteration cycles, and each process can produce unnecessary prints. Tossing those prints out can cause significant environmental degradation. The ideal scenario would involve making a 3D machine that recycles any plastic you throw into it and turns it into a biodegradable compound that can be discarded out the window when you decided to upgrade. A couple of projects have popped up to produce machines that can essentially do the same thing.

The fundamental objective of additive manufacturing, by and large, has been to create lesser wastage than different forms of manufacturing and ensure production remains low cost. Nonetheless, it is no surprise that 3D printing, too, in the end, prompts at least some type of wastage. But what happens to prints that don’t make the final cut? Or prints with defects in them or even prints that are just made to test the machine’s capabilities. This depends entirely on the material utilized. Materials like PLA, for instance, can be melted down and reused. Two or three organizations are actively attempting to diminish wastage and create more practical techniques for recycling unused material. 08The future of 3D Printing3D printers are definitely going to be responsible for the dawn of the third (or 3D) industrial revolution. We’ve come a long way from the first one. Ever since the first industrial revolution, factories, tools etc. have been synonymous with manufacturing – mass manufacturing or otherwise. The notion of modern manufacturing being done without factories is in itself an astonishing one. However, this is exactly what is going to happen as 3D printing reaches individuals and small businesses. We can now build parts, appliances and tools using a wide variety of materials all from the comforts of your home – just create or download a digital 3D model of the object of your choice and with just a click of a button; you can watch your 3D object take shape. The technology has been around for around 3 decades now, but off late however, rapid advances in processing power bandwidth and storage has seen this technology being catapulted into the limelight. Sure to be a force that changes the entire outlook of the manufacture. D printers are definitely going to be responsible for the dawn of the third (or 3D) industrial revolution. We’ve come a long way from the first one. Ever since the first industrial revolution, factories, tools etc. have been synonymous with manufacturing – mass manufacturing or otherwise. The notion of modern manufacturing being done without factories is in itself an astonishing one. However, this is exactly what is going to happen as 3D printing reaches individuals and small businesses. We can now build parts, appliances and tools using a wide variety of materials all from the comforts of your home – just create or download a digital 3D model of the object of your choice and with just a click of a button; you can watch your 3D object take shape. The technology has been around for around 3 decades now, but off late however, rapid advances in processing power bandwidth and storage has seen this technology being catapulted into the limelight.

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