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✝Mudderator from Hell✝ Poster Rank:10 e-mail Join Date: Oct 2006 Posts: 94,872
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3D Printing of Liquid Metal Microstructures
Researchers at NC state university have developed a way to print liquid metals into three dimensional structures at room temperature.
Using a type of gallium alloy, the metal stabilizes and forms a thin oxide skin to create volumes that are not possible using conventional liquids, like water.
In the demonstration video, the process is expelled as small metal droplets, carefully organized in sequence as an antenna on-top of a roach, illustrating how small the features can be rendered when compared to a familiar reference point.
In addition, the resulting components can, in principle, self-heal, allowing for the formation of mechanically stable structures strong enough to stand against gravity and the large surface tension of the liquid.
The method is capable of printing wires, arrays of spheres, arches, and interconnected forms. (a) liquid metal ejected rapidly from a glass capillary forms a thin wire.
(b) these fibers are strong enough to suspend over a gap despite being composed of liquid.
(c) a free standing liquid metal arch.
(d) a tower of liquid metal droplets.
(e) a 3D cubic array of stacked drop-lets.
(f) a metal wire and an arch composed of liquid metal droplets.
(g) an array of in-plane lines of free standing liquid metal fabricated by filling a micro channel with the metal and dissolving away the mold. scale bars represent 500 μm. |
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