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Programmable 3D-printed filaments mimic artificial muscles with heat-driven bending and twisting
Nature is replete with slender filaments that bend and coil—from climbing grape vines, to folded proteins, to elephant trunks that can pick up a peanut but also take down a tree.
The technology behind 3D printing is growing fast. If you're thinking about joining the world of color 3D printing, there are ...
Cobra was first to market with 3D-printed irons with the groundbreaking LIMIT3D irons last spring. But, as the name implied, the irons were only available in a limited run. Now, the company is ...
Building hot rods remained basically the same for decades, with tried-and-true “old school” methods being used to create increasingly complex builds. Computers really changed the game, allowing things ...
Nabeela Essa’s MPhil in Inclusive Innovation explored whether technologies like 3D-printed concrete can be adapted for South ...
While 3D printing is indeed a burgeoning technology, it's limited by the fact that items can typically only be printed from a single material. A new system still uses just one print resin, but that ...
India's all-weather friend Russia has won a global competitive bid and has supplied a high-end 3D printer that can print ...
Qatar is taking bold steps to transform its educational infrastructure. To lead this change, the country has launched one of the world's largest 3D-printed construction projects. UCC Holding and the ...
Ordinarily, the 3D printing of multi-colored, multi-textured objects is a relatively complex and inefficient process. That could soon change, however, thanks to a clever new technique in which a ...
RIT engineering Ph.D. candidate Valeria Marin Montealegre advances 3D printing, using zinc in molten metal jetting, to ...
The instrument manufacturing company ODD Guitars has been implementing 3D-printing technology to generate all sorts of cool things. The company was originated by design engineer Olaf Diegel, whose ...
Heart valve disease has no effective long-term treatment, and people who suffer from it have to endure repeated, invasive surgeries throughout their lives to survive. Researchers at Georgia Tech and ...
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