![]() |
Online Tools Sponsored by:
|
Objet "Digital Materials" Combines Various Mechanical Properties New printer enables simultaneous jetting of distinct materials or a combination in various ratios. | Published November 28, 2007
In combination with Objet’s new Connex500 printer, the technology allows for the printing of parts and assemblies made of multiple model materials, all in a single build. The Connex500 printer also fabricates digital materials on the fly, enabling users to create composite materials that have preset combinations of mechanical properties. The process allows, for example, creating a product with a rubber-like handle perfectly bonded to a rigid tool, and in one step. It also means designers can combine two different materials in a variety of combinations to result in numerous degrees of mechanical values resulting in what the company calls Digital Materials (DM).
Objet’s patent-pending PolyJet Matrix Technology works by jetting two distinct Objet FullCure model materials in preset combinations. The technology controls every nozzle in each print head, enabling combinations of model materials to be jetted from designated nozzles according to location and model type. The ability to manage the jetting matrix provides full control of the mechanical properties of the jetted materials, allowing the user to choose and fabricate the most suitable composite materials to emulate the target design. Printing parts and assemblies with multiple model materials eliminates the need to design, print, and glue together separate model parts to make a complete model. The savings are realized in printing and postprocessing time.
“This is an industry first,” stated Terry Wohlers of Wohlers Associates, Inc., after reviewing the capabilities of the new PolyJet Matrix Technology. “This opens up exciting new options that before were impossible with methods of additive fabrication.” With the new system, it is possible to produce parts and assemblies with 21 preset combinations of materials, as well as the seven original materials from the FullCure line. The Connex500 prints parts with specific Shore A values, a scale used to indicate material hardness in soft, flexible materials. Consequently, users of the machine can match the Shore A values to those of production materials. The Connex500 is capable of producing prototypes of products that use overmolding in the manufacturing process. The new system can print multimaterial parts in a single build process that eliminates the difficulties and expense of the traditional process. What’s more, the system is capable of fabricating translucent models that can aid in medical applications by showing nerves, tumors, and other areas of interest.
The Connex500 offers three printing modes. The DM mode operates at 12mm per hour in 30-micron layers and is used for Digital Materials and multiple model material printing. The HQ mode builds parts at 12mm per hour in 16-micron (0.0006 inch) layers, and the HS mode runs at 20mm per hour in 30-micron (0.001 inch) layers. The Connex500’s build volume is 500 x 400 x 200 mm (19.7 x 15.7 x 7.9 in.). New Objet Studio software is included to assign multiple materials to STL files and create files that include different material types, assemblies, and model characteristics. Objet will unveil the Connex500 and PolyJet Matrix at the EuroMold 2007 exhibition on December 5-8 in Frankfurt, Germany (Hall 8.0, Stand H-144). For more information, visit Objet Geometries Ltd. at 2objet.com. Connex500 PolyJet Matrix System brochure
|
|