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3D Printing: Applications and Advantages

3D printing, or additive manufacturing, is revolutionizing production by creating objects layer by layer from various materials, offering design flexibility and reduced waste compared to traditional methods. In India, the technology is being adopted across sectors such as aerospace, automotive, healthcare, and construction, driven by government initiatives like 'Make in India' and the National Strategy for Additive Manufacturing. Despite its advantages, challenges like high equipment costs, limited scalability, and material constraints remain, necessitating ongoing innovation and skill development.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
52 views16 pages

3D Printing: Applications and Advantages

3D printing, or additive manufacturing, is revolutionizing production by creating objects layer by layer from various materials, offering design flexibility and reduced waste compared to traditional methods. In India, the technology is being adopted across sectors such as aerospace, automotive, healthcare, and construction, driven by government initiatives like 'Make in India' and the National Strategy for Additive Manufacturing. Despite its advantages, challenges like high equipment costs, limited scalability, and material constraints remain, necessitating ongoing innovation and skill development.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd

3D Printing Technology- Applications,

Process, Advantages, Types


3D printing
▪ 3D printing, commonly known as Additive manufacturing (AM), is an emerging
technology that is rapidly transforming manufacturing processes worldwide. This
revolutionary method creates 3-dimensional objects by successively layering materials
under computer control. 3D printing involves layering materials like plastics,
composites, or bio-materials to create objects that range in shape, size, rigidity, and
colour. Compared to traditional subtractive techniques, 3D printing offers
immense design flexibility, reduced waste, and the ability to produce complex
geometries.
▪ As one of the largest and fastest-growing economies, India holds tremendous potential
for adopting 3D printing technologies. The 'Make in India' initiative and vision for self-
reliance have brought additive manufacturing into sharp focus.
A Brief overview of the working process of a 3D printer:
❑ 3D Model Design - The process begins with creating a 3D model of the object
using computer-aided design (CAD) software. The model is sliced into layers.
❑ Machine Preparation - The 3D printer is loaded with the required raw materials
like plastic filament, resin, metal powder etc. based on the printing technology used.
❑ Printing Materials - Unlike inkjet and laser printers, a 3D printer does not use liquid ink
or solid powder. It deposits layers of molten plastic, metal wire, or powder and fuses
them with the existing structure using adhesives or ultraviolet light.
❑ Layer-by-Layer Printing - The 3D printer deposits and fuses together material layer-by-
layer as per the design file. The build platform lowers and the process is repeated until
the object is formed.
•Post-Processing - Printed objects may require additional steps like cleaning,
smoothening, baking, and polishing. Support structures are removed.
•Quality Checks - Printed objects are checked for dimensional accuracy and compliance
with design specifications. Defects may require re-printing.
•Application - The final 3D printed part can then be put to functional use or for other
applications like prototyping, education, art and so on.
•Materials: A range of materials are used for 3D printing including plastics like ABS, PLA,
nylon, photopolymers, metals including titanium, aluminum, steel, gold, silver, alloys,
ceramics, paper, wax, and even food materials like chocolate.
• New materials development is also an active area of innovation.
Types of 3d printing Technology

Powder layering

Roller

Powder

Laser melting
Laser Source
Mirror

Powder layering
Roller

Powder
Types of 3D Printing Technology
There are several technologies used in 3D printing. The most common are:
▪ Ink-jet Printing: It uses inkjet technology to selectively deposit liquid photopolymer materials
layer-by-layer which are cured with UV light. It offers high resolution and surface quality.
▪ Fused Deposition Modelling (FDM): A plastic filament or metal wire is unwound from a coil
and supplies material to an extrusion nozzle which can turn on and off.
▪ The nozzle is heated to melt the material and lays down the melted material in thin layers
on the build platform.
▪ Stereolithography (SLA): A laser is used to selectively cure a tank of liquid photopolymer
resin layer by layer.
▪ Selective Laser Sintering (SLS): A high-power laser is used to fuse small particles of plastic,
metal, ceramic or glass powders into a mass representing the desired 3D shape.
▪ Electronic Beam Melting (EBM): Uses an electron beam in a vacuum environment to melt and
fuse metallic powder particles layer by layer.
▪ Commonly used for titanium alloys in aerospace and medical implants.
▪ Laminated Object Manufacturing (LOM): Layers of adhesive-coated paper, plastic or metal
laminates are successively glued together and cut to shape with a knife or laser cutter.
▪ Digital Light Processing (DLP): Similar to stereolithography but with a digital light processing
chip controlling the light source, enabling faster build times.
APPLICATION OF 3D PRINTING

JEWELLERY BREADBOARDING

ORTHOPEDIC

INDUSTRIAL

CULINARY DESIGN

DENTAL
3D printing technology is driving transformation across major industries in India due to its ability to enable faster
design iterations, simplified production workflows and greater customization. Key sectors adopting 3D printing
across various applications are:
•Aerospace: Lightweight printed aircraft and spacecraft parts can replace traditionally manufactured parts to reduce
weight and material needs.
• HAL and Wipro 3D printed an air blower component for the TEJAS aircraft using direct metal laser sintering
(DMLS). It achieved a 50% weight reduction compared to conventional manufacturing.
• GE's first 3D-printed jet engine fuel nozzle component manufactured in India improved durability and
thermal efficiency.
•Automotive: The automotive industry uses 3D printing for rapid prototyping and to produce specialized parts and
tools. Printed parts help improve design and can reduce weight.
• Mahindra produces around 200 3D-printed polymer parts annually for vehicle prototypes. This has
accelerated design verification and development.
• Tata Motors uses selective laser sintering to batch-produce plastic and rubber spare parts. It has reduced
costs by 80-90% compared to conventional techniques.
•Construction: 3D printing technology is being used to construct scale models of buildings,
bridges, and even full-scale houses and other structures using concrete and other materials.
• India's first 3D-printed house was built in just 2 weeks by Tvasta using the concrete
extrusion technique. It enables faster, sustainable construction.
• 'Amaze 28’, Kerala's first 3D printed building, was constructed in just 28 days at 75%
reduced labour cost.
•Healthcare: 3D printing is revolutionising healthcare with customised prosthetics, implants,
anatomical models for surgery practice, and pharmaceuticals.
• 3D printed skull implant by MedTech startup Yaantra enabled surgeons to accurately
visualize tumor shape and remove guesswork during surgery.
• Ossio's 3D-printed orthopedic implants made from proprietary Ossioglass match natural
bone strength and hardness.
•Consumer: With 3D printing, products can be easily customised or personalised to an individual's
specs.
• Imaginarium Rapid offers 3D printing services to leading jewelry retailers for custom designs in
gold and silver.
• Companies like Dochub and Carbon Heel adopt 3D printing for customized and flexible footwear
designs.
•Public Infrastructure: India's first 3D printed post office built in just 45 days by L&T and IIT Madras
demonstrates rapid construction capabilities.
•Biomimicry and 3D Printing: Biomimicry is the material design by taking analogies from the functional
aspects of similar structures of living things. Examples include spider-web-inspired lightweight
structures, lotus leaf self-cleaning surfaces, etc.
• By imitating nature's time-tested patterns, biomimicry can help 3D printing produce optimised
shapes, stronger structures, customised surfaces and more using less material.
• Integrating biomimicry principles into 3D printing offers exciting possibilities for sustainable
manufacturing.
Advantages of 3D Printing
3D printing confers several unique advantages over traditional manufacturing methods:
▪ Customised Production: 3D printing easily creates customised products tailored to individual needs
rather than mass-standardised products. It enables affordable personalisation and tool-less
manufacturing.
▪ Complex Geometries: Intricate shapes and complex internal structures like lattices,
and honeycombs that enhance strength and functionality can be 3D printed. These are impossible to
manufacture otherwise.
▪ On-Demand Local Production: Digital inventories and distributed 3D printing reduce shipping costs,
delays, carbon emissions and the need for global supply chains. Spare parts can be printed on-site.
▪ Material Savings: Additive 3D printing deposits only required material minimising waste. Scrap can
be recycled into filament, powder or feedstock.
▪ Democratised Manufacturing: 3D printing grants access to affordable, quality manufacturing
capabilities to individuals, startups, and small firms. Reduces barriers of expensive tools,
moulds and dedicated factories.
▪ Rapid Design Iteration: The ability to swiftly 3D print design prototypes enables faster
innovation cycles, improvements and performance optimisation before finalising the design.
▪ Education and Training: 3D printing develops creative design thinking and spatial skills.
Student engagement and understanding of concepts like design, engineering, arts, and
mathematics improve.
▪ Supply Chain Resilience: On-site 3D printing of parts using digital inventories reduces supply
chain disruptions due to geopolitical tensions, pandemics, and natural disasters. It strengthens
localised manufacturing capacity.
Concerns and Challenges of 3D Printing Technology
Despite rapid adoption, certain limitations and risks posed by 3-D printing need resolution:
▪ Limited scalability: Production volumes remain low compared to traditional manufacturing. Part size is
restricted by printer dimensions.
▪ High equipment costs: Industrial-grade metal 3-D printer systems still cost over ₹1 crore limiting
broader enterprise adoption.
▪ Material constraints: Limited number of 3-D printable materials. Remains challenging for ceramics and
multi-material components.
▪ Process reliability: Defects like layer delamination, incomplete filling, and micro-porosity often affect
final build quality and material properties.
▪ Standards: Lack of standardized design rules, data formats, quality benchmarks, and material
specifications hamper interoperability and reliability.
▪ Legal Concerns: 3-D printing of weapons, controlled accessories, and patented objects by unregulated
actors poses risks.
▪ Skilled labour: Operating printers and particularly designing optimized 3-D models requires specialized
technical skills development.
Key Initiatives in India for 3D Printing
Recognizing 3D printing's immense potential for economic growth and self-reliance, the Government of
India has devised targeted policies and initiatives:
•National Strategy for Additive Manufacturing: Formulated by the Ministry of Electronics and Information
Technology in 2021, lays down a strategic roadmap to foster 3D printing research, skill development,
manufacturing and global partnerships.
•Key goals:
• Enable 100 innovative 3D printing startups.
• Develop 50 India-centric technologies by 2025
• Train 5,000 skilled workers by 2024
▪ Samarth Udyog: This Industry 4.0 initiative by the Ministry of Heavy Industries aims to enhance
manufacturing competitiveness, including the adoption of 3D printing.
▪ Make in India 2.0: As part of its Atmanirbhar Bharat vision, the government plans to position India
as a global 3D printing hub.
▪ Partnerships with Global Institutes: The government has collaborated with organizations
like Applied Materials to establish cutting-edge 3D printing research centres.
▪ Defence Initiatives: The defence sector has recognized 3D printing's benefits for component
production. DRDO and BEL are actively using the technology.
▪ Healthcare advances: The Biotechnology Industry Research Assistance Council (BIRAC) initiated a
3D printing grand challenge to develop localised healthcare solutions.
▪ Skilling Programs: The National Skill Development Corporation (NSDC) and central and state
governments have launched programs to train youth in 3D printing. PM Kaushal Kendras offer
training.

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