NIST only participates in the February and August reviews.
name |
email |
phone |
|
Benjamin Caplins |
benjamin.caplins@nist.gov |
303 497 6703 |
Callie Higgins |
Callie.higgins@nist.gov |
303.497.5991 |
Jason P Killgore |
killgore@nist.gov |
303.497.4729 |
The selective curing of photopolymer resins presents an outstanding opportunity for high-resolution, high-performance, high-throughput additive manufacturing. Applications can range from biomedical to consumer goods to aerospace and automotive. Processing methods include variations on vat photopolymerization, ink-jetting and more. To realize the full potential of photopolymer additive manufacturing (PAM) requires innovations in characterization, modeling and materials. This opportunity seeks proposals that enable advancements in PAM with an emphasis on understanding the fundamental science and characterization of the processes to achieve higher performance, particularly at the voxel and sub-voxel length scales.
Higgins, Brown and Killgore, Digital light processing in a hybrid atomic force microscope: In Situ, nanoscale characterization of the printing process, Additive Manufacturing (2020) https://doi.org/10.1016/j.addma.2020.101744
Brown et al. , Voxel-Scale Conversion Mapping Informs Intrinsic Resolution in Stereolithographic Additive Manufacturing, ACS Applied Polymer Materials (2020) https://doi.org/10.1021/acsapm.0c01090
Higgins, Killgore and Poster, NIST Special Publication 1500-17: Report from the Photopolymer Additive Manufacturing Workshop: Roadmapping a Future for Stereolithography, Inkjet, and Beyond, https://doi.org/10.6028/NIST.SP.1500-17
vat photopolymerization; stereolithography; ink jet; digital light processing; acrylate