“A team of Northwestern Engineers has created a new way to print three-dimensional metallic objects using rust and metal powders. While current methods rely on vast metal powder beds and expensive lasers or electron beams, Northwestern’s new technique uses liquid inks and common furnaces, resulting in a cheaper, faster, and more uniform process. The Northwestern team also demonstrated that the new method works for an extensive variety of metals, metal mixtures, alloys, and metal oxides and compounds.”
Related Content
Related Posts:
- New brain-like transistor mimics human intelligence
- Stellar demolition derby births powerful gamma-ray burst
- Ramping up domestic graphite production could aid the green energy transition
- Now on the molecular scale: electric motors
- Dissolving implantable device relieves pain without drugs
- Tiny robotic crab is smallest-ever remote-controlled walking robot
- Winged microchip is smallest-ever human-made flying structure
- Now everyone can build battery-free electronic devices
- New material offers ecofriendly solution to converting waste heat into energy
- Scientists Release New AI-based Tools to Accelerate Functional Electronic Materials Discovery