scholarly journals A quantitative analysis of 3D printed face shields and masks during COVID-19

2020 ◽  
Vol 2 ◽  
pp. 42 ◽  
Author(s):  
James I. Novak ◽  
Jennifer Loy

In response to shortages in personal protective equipment (PPE) during the COVID-19 pandemic, makers, community groups and manufacturers around the world utilised 3D printing to fabricate items, including face shields and face masks for healthcare workers and the broader community. In reaction to both local and global needs, numerous designs emerged and were shared online. In this paper, 37 face shields and 31 face masks suitable for fused filament fabrication were analysed from a fabrication perspective, documenting factors such as filament use, time to print and geometric qualities. 3D print times for similar designs varied by several hours, meaning some designs could be produced in higher volumes. Overall, the results show that face shields were approximately twice as fast to 3D print compared to face masks and used approximately half as much filament. Additionally, a face shield typically required 1.5 parts to be 3D printed, whereas face masks required 5 3D printed parts. However, by quantifying the print times, filament use, 3D printing costs, part dimensions, number of parts and total volume of each design, the wide variations within each product category could be tracked and evaluated. This data and objective analysis will help makers, manufacturers, regulatory bodies and researchers consolidate the 3D printing response to COVID-19 and optimise the ongoing strategy to combat supply chain shortages now and in future healthcare crises.

2020 ◽  
Vol 2 ◽  
pp. 24 ◽  
Author(s):  
James I. Novak ◽  
Jennifer Loy

The COVID-19 pandemic significantly increased demand for medical and protective equipment by frontline health workers, as well as the general community, causing the supply chain to stretch beyond capacity, an issue further heightened by geographical and political lockdowns. Various 3D printing technologies were quickly utilised by businesses, institutions and individuals to manufacture a range of products on-demand, close to where they were needed. This study gathered data about 91 3D printed projects initiated prior to April 1, 2020, as the virus spread globally. It found that 60% of products were for personal protective equipment, of which 62% were 3D printed face shields. Fused filament fabrication was the most common 3D print technology used, and websites were the most popular means of centralising project information. The project data provides objective, quantitative insight balanced with qualitative critical review of the broad trends, opportunities and challenges that could be used by governments, health and medical bodies, manufacturing organisations and the 3D printing community to streamline the current response, as well as plan for future crises using a distributed, flexible manufacturing approach.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gianni Stano ◽  
Attilio Di Nisio ◽  
Anna Maria Lanzolla ◽  
Mattia Ragolia ◽  
Gianluca Percoco

Abstract In recent years, the exploitation of Additive Manufacturing technologies for the fabrication of different kinds of sensors has abruptly increased: in particular, a growing interest for extrusion-based techniques has emerged. This research proposes the exploitation of Fused Filament Fabrication (FFF) process and two commercial materials (one flexible and one conductive) for the monolithic fabrication of a bendable, coplanar capacitive sensor. The whole sensor, consisting of a flexible substrate and two electrodes, has been fabricated in a single-step printing cycle: Design for Additive Manufacturing approach was used, setting out a methodology to direct 3D print thin and close tracks with conductive materials, in order to obtain high capacitance values measurable by common measurement instrumentations. Despite a huge exploitation of FFF technology for piezoresistive-based sensors, this manufacturing process has never been used for the fabrication of coplanar capacitive sensors since the manufacture of thin and close conductive tracks (key requirement in coplanar capacitive sensors) is a challenging task, mainly due to low manufacturability of extruded conductive beads with a high level of detail. Two versions of the sensor were developed: the first one with an embedded 3D printed coverage (ready to use) and the second one which requires a further manual post-processing to seal the electrodes. The main benefits related to the exploitation of FFF technology for these sensors are: i) the reduction of the number of different manufacturing processes employed, from at least two in traditional manufacturing approach up to one, ii) the exploitation of a cost-effective technology compared to traditional high-cost technologies employed (i.e. lithography, inkjet etc.) iii) the reduction of manual and assembly tasks (one of the proposed versions does not require any further task) , and iv) the cost-effectiveness of the sensors (in a range between 0.27 € and 0.38 €). The two developed prototypes have been tested demonstrating all their potentialities in the field of liquid level sensing, showing results consistent with the ones found in scientific literature: good sensitivity and high linearity and repeatability were proved when different liquids were employed. These 3D printed liquid level sensors have these features: i) flexible sensor, ii) the length is limited only by the machine workspace, iii) they can be either applied outside of the traditional reservoirs or embedded into the reservoirs (by 3D printing both the reservoir and sensor in the same manufacturing cycle), and iv) simple calibration.Finally, the bendability of these sensors paves the way toward their application for liquid level sensing into tanks with non-conventional shapes and for other application fields (i.e. soft robotics, non-invasive monitoring for biomedical applications).


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
pp. 419
Author(s):  
Milena Djukanović ◽  
Ardijan Mavrić ◽  
Jovana Jovanović ◽  
Milovan Roganović ◽  
Velibor Bošković

Shortly after the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic, there was a need to provide protective equipment to the medical facilities whose supplies were threatened to be depleted. Just like many countries in Europe, Montenegro responded to the need for medical equipment by using the advantages of 3D printers while establishing a state network of production hubs, ensuring closed connectivity, communication, and the mutual fulfilment of personal protective equipment (PPE) demands whenever and wherever required. With the second wave of the pandemic, Montenegro rose to second place in the world with the number of coronavirus cases, which also led to an increasing number of infected medical staff. Since fever is a frequent symptom of SA+RS-CoV2 infection, a type of innovative 3D-printed thermo-sensored medical gear has been designed and tested in hospital conditions. This medical gear shaped like a bracelet, which changes color in the presence of high human body temperatures, proves to be efficient and easy to use for medical staff as well as patients.


2021 ◽  
pp. 004051752110062
Author(s):  
Jordan Kalman ◽  
Kazem Fayazbakhsh ◽  
Danielle Martin

Fused filament fabrication (FFF) 3D printing can be used for manufacturing flexible isogrid structures. This work presents a novel draping analysis of flexible 3D printed isogrids from thermoplastic polyurethane (TPU) using image processing. A small-scale multi-camera automated draping apparatus (ADA) is designed and used to characterize draping behavior of 3D printed isogrid structures based on draping coefficient (DC) and mode. Circular specimens are designed and 3D printed that accommodate up to eight additional weights on their perimeters to enhance draping. Five infill patterns, three infill percentages, and three loading cases are explored to evaluate their impact on specimens’ draping coefficient and mode, resulting in 45 tests. The range of DCs in this study is 21.9% to 91.5%, and a large range of draping modes is observed. For the lowest infill percentage, specimen mass is not the sole contributor to the DC values and the infill pattern has a significant impact for the three loading cases. Considering draping modes, the maximum number of convex and concave nodes observed for 25% infill specimens with added weights is three. The draping behavior characterization developed in this study can be followed to design and 3D print new flexible isogrids with textile applications.


2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (24) ◽  
pp. 8967
Author(s):  
Victor Gil Muñoz ◽  
Luisa M. Muneta ◽  
Ruth Carrasco-Gallego ◽  
Juan de Juanes Marquez ◽  
David Hidalgo-Carvajal

The circular economy model offers great opportunities to companies, as it not only allows them to capture additional value from their products and materials, but also reduce the fluctuations of price-related risks and material supply. These risks are present in all kind of businesses not based on the circular economy. The circular economy also enables economic growth without the need for more resources. This is because each unit has a higher value as a result of recycling and reuse of products and materials after use. Following this circular economics framework, the Polytechnic University of Madrid (Universidad Politécnica de Madrid, UPM) has adopted strategies aimed at improving the circularity of products. In particular, this article provides the result of obtaining recycled PLA filament from waste originating from university 3D FFF (fused filament fabrication) printers and waste generated by “Coronamakers” in the production of visors and parts for PPEs (Personal Protective Equipment) during the lockdown period of COVID-19 in Spain. This filament is used in the production of 3D printed parts that university students use in their classes, so the circular loop is closed. The obtained score of Material Circularity Indicator (MCI) of this material has been calculated, indicating its high level of circularity.


Polymers ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (4) ◽  
pp. 545
Author(s):  
Krzysztof Rodzeń ◽  
Preetam K. Sharma ◽  
Alistair McIlhagger ◽  
Mozaffar Mokhtari ◽  
Foram Dave ◽  
...  

The manufacture of polyetheretherketone/hydroxyapatite (PEEK/HA) composites is seen as a viable approach to help enhance direct bone apposition in orthopaedic implants. A range of methods have been used to produce composites, including Selective Laser Sintering and injection moulding. Such techniques have drawbacks and lack flexibility to manufacture complex, custom-designed implants. 3D printing gets around many of the restraints and provides new opportunities for innovative solutions that are structurally suited to meet the needs of the patient. This work reports the direct 3D printing of extruded PEEK/HA composite filaments via a Fused Filament Fabrication (FFF) approach. In this work samples are 3D printed by a custom modified commercial printer Ultimaker 2+ (UM2+). SEM-EDX and µCT analyses show that HA particles are evenly distributed throughout the bulk and across the surface of the native 3D printed samples, with XRD highlighting up to 50% crystallinity and crystalline domains clearly observed in SEM and HR-TEM analyses. This highlights the favourable temperature conditions during 3D printing. The yield stress and ultimate tensile strength obtained for all the samples are comparable to human femoral cortical bone. The results show how FFF 3D printing of PEEK/HA composites up to 30 wt% HA can be achieved.


Lab on a Chip ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Liang Wu ◽  
Stephen Beirne ◽  
Joan-Marc Cabot Canyelles ◽  
Brett Paull ◽  
Gordon G. Wallace ◽  
...  

Additive manufacturing (3D printing) offers a flexible approach for the production of bespoke microfluidic structures such as the electroosmotic pump. Here a readily accessible fused filament fabrication (FFF) 3D printing...


Polymers ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (15) ◽  
pp. 2518
Author(s):  
Nunzio Cennamo ◽  
Lorena Saitta ◽  
Claudio Tosto ◽  
Francesco Arcadio ◽  
Luigi Zeni ◽  
...  

In this work, a novel approach to realize a plasmonic sensor is presented. The proposed optical sensor device is designed, manufactured, and experimentally tested. Two photo-curable resins are used to 3D print a surface plasmon resonance (SPR) sensor. Both numerical and experimental analyses are presented in the paper. The numerical and experimental results confirm that the 3D printed SPR sensor presents performances, in term of figure of merit (FOM), very similar to other SPR sensors made using plastic optical fibers (POFs). For the 3D printed sensor, the measured FOM is 13.6 versus 13.4 for the SPR-POF configuration. The cost analysis shows that the 3D printed SPR sensor can be manufactured at low cost (∼15 €) that is competitive with traditional sensors. The approach presented here allows to realize an innovative SPR sensor showing low-cost, 3D-printing manufacturing free design and the feasibility to be integrated with other optical devices on the same plastic planar support, thus opening undisclosed future for the optical sensor systems.


2021 ◽  
Vol 1023 ◽  
pp. 75-81
Author(s):  
Aappo Mustakangas ◽  
Atef Hamada ◽  
Antti Järvenpää

Cost-efficient 3D-printing can create a lot of new opportunities in engineering as it enables rapid prototyping of models and functional parts. In the present study, Polylactic acid (PLA) cubic specimens with different types of infill patterns (IPs), rectilinear, grid and cuboid, were additively manufactured by Fused Filament Fabrication 3D-printing. The PLA cubes are fabricated with one perimeter and different IPs density (10, 20, and 30%). Subsequently, the compressive strengths of the PLA materials were measured in two loading directions, i.e., the layers building direction is parallel (PD) to the loading axis and perpendicular (ND) to the loading direction. An optical microscope was used to examine the deformed IPs in both loading directions. The compressive flow stress curves of the PLA cubes infilled with rectilinear and grid patterns exhibited strong fluctuations with lower compressive strengths in the loading direction along ND. The PLA with 30% grid IP revealed a superior strength of ~12 kN in the loading direction along PD. On the contrary, the same material exhibited a worst compressive strength 3 kN along ND.


2018 ◽  
Vol 2018 (1) ◽  
pp. 000099-000103
Author(s):  
William A. Goodman

Abstract Goodman Technologies has been directly responsive to, and focused on, 3D printing and additive manufacturing techniques, and what it takes to manufacture in zero-gravity. During a NASA Phase I SBIR project, using a small multi-printhead machine, we showed that it was possible to formulate and 3D print silicon carbide into shapes appropriate for lightweight mirrors and structures at the production rate of 1.2 square-meter/day. Gradient lattice coupons with feature sizes on the order of 0.8mm were printed and were easily machined to very fine tolerances, ten-thousandths of an inch by Coastline Optics in Camarillo, CA. To further elaborate on the list of achievements, in Phase I, Team GT demonstrated three different ceramization techniques for 3D printing low areal cost, ultra-lightweight Silicon Carbide (SiC) mirrors and structures, radiation shielding, and electronics, several of which could be employed in microgravity The Goodman Technologies briefing presented at 2017 Mirror Technology Days “3D Printed Silicon Carbide Scalable to Meter-Class Segments for Far-Infrared Surveyor: NASA Contract NNX17CM29P along with sample coupons resulted in extreme interest from both Government and the Contractor communities. Our materials, which we call RoboSiC™, is suited for many other applications including heat sinks and radiation shielding for space electronics, and we have already started to make the first parts for these applications. The successful Phase I project suggests that we will meet or exceed all NASA requirements for the primary mirror of a Far-IR Surveyor such as the Origins Space Telescope (OST) and have a high probability solution for the LUVOIR Surveyor in time for the 2020 Decadal Survey. Results indicate that printing on the ground will achieve an areal density of 7.75 kg/square-meter (~39% of a James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) beryllium segment), a cost to print of $60K/segment, and an optical surface that has nanometer-scale tolerances. Printing in the microgravity environment of space we have the potential to achieve an areal density of 1.0–2.0 kg/square meter (<10% of a JWST beryllium segment), with a cost to print of ~$10K/segment. The areal density is 2–15 times better than the NASA goal of 15 kg/square meter, and the costs are substantially better than the NASA goal of $100K/square meter. The encapsulated gradient lattice construction provides a uniform CTE throughout the part for dimensional stability, incredible specific stiffness, and the added benefit of cryo-damping. For the extreme wavefront control required by the Large UV/Optical/IR Surveyor (LUVOIR) the regularly spaced lattice construction should also provide deterministic mapping of any optical distortions directly to the regular actuator spacing of a deformable mirror (DM). Some of our processes will also allow for direct embedding of electronics for active structures and segments. Encapsulation of the lattice structures will allow for actively cooling with helium for unprecedented low emissivity and thermal control. Several decades of experience and testing with SiC have shown that our materials will survive, nay thrive in, the most extreme Space, Cryogenic, Laser and Nuclear Environments.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document