scholarly journals Lighting Simulation in 3D Printing

2020 ◽  
pp. abstract1-1-abstract1-2
Author(s):  
Denis Sumin ◽  
Karol Myszkowski ◽  
Alexey Voloboy

3D printing for rapid prototyping and production of unique objects is being actively developed. Consumer-grade printers are now commonly available for a range of purposes, while increasingly advanced techniques allow us to fabricate novel shapes, mechanical properties, and appearances. The printers’ capabilities have improved dramatically from printing single-material objects to producing detailed structures with pervoxel material variation. Since the 2010s, it is possible to fabricate full-colour 3D objects with resolutions of hundreds of DPI (voxels’ dimensions are in the order of 10 μm). Such capabilities are most prominent in printers based on the photo-polymer jetting process. Ideally, it should be possible now to produce photorealistic appearances or visually indistinguishable objects copies for, e.g., cultural-heritage applications.However, the resins used as print materials in commercial devices are inherently translucent, i.e., exhibit significant sub-surface scattering. This serves effective colour mixing in full-colour print processes, thus commercial printer drivers offer high-quality colour reproduction. At the same time, the resulting light diffusion leads to over-blurring and potential colour bleeding when printingspatially-varying colour textures. This translucent ‘crosstalk’ between surface points also strongly depends on the internal structure of the volume surrounding each surface point.Previously existing scattering-aware methods used simplified models for light diffusion and accepted the visual blur as an immutable property of the print medium.In this talk, we present the series of works conducted by a consortium of several institutes (Max-Planck Institute for Informatics, Germany; Charles University in Prague, Czech Republic; Institute of Science and Technology, Austria; University Col-lege London, United Kingdom; Universita della Svizzera Italiana, Switzerland; The Keldysh Institute of Applied Mathematics RAS, Russia). Our work counteracts heterogeneous scattering to obtain the impression of a crisp albedo texture on top of the 3D print, by optimizing for a fully volumetric material distribution that preserves the target appearance.We build our iterative method on top of a general Monte-Carlo simulation of heterogeneous scattering. We find out that a certain arrangement of materials expands the gamut of achievable appearances and makes it possible to produce sharp textures. This knowledge built-in into the volume-update step enables convergence justafter 10–15 iterations. We verify these findings using an established stochastic gradient-descent optimization for small canonical objects where it is feasible computationally.Expansion of our method to fabrication of arbitrary 3D objects with the translucent resins opens a set of problems of achievable colour combinations on the two sides of thin shapes, in the extreme convex and concave shapes. Physically correct lighting simulation enables exploration of these extreme cases where no ideal solution is possible. It turns out that a re-formulation of established gamut-mapping methods is needed for the medium with the inherent cross-talk properties such as the scattering resins of the modern full-colour 3D printers.Elaborating further ideas from we also propose a fast forward predictor of the object's surface appearance based on a neural network to replace the Monte-Carlo simulation in order to speed up the preparation of the model by 300 times. The achieved acceleration allows to reduce simulation time to minutes for a single, GPU-equipped workstation.Thismakesthe print preparation timings practical.

2021 ◽  
Vol 28 (6) ◽  
Author(s):  
Maryna Gorlachova ◽  
Boris Mahltig

AbstractThe actual paper is related to adhesive properties of 3D objects printed on cotton textile fabrics. For practical applications of 3D prints in the textile sector, the adhesion of the printed object on the textile substrate is an important issue. In the current study, two different types of polymers are printed on cotton – polylactide acid (PLA) and polyamide 6.6 (Nylon). Altogether six cotton fabrics differing in structure, weight and thickness are evaluated. Also, the effect of washing and enzymatic desizing is investigated. For printing parameters, best results are gained for elevated process temperatures, intermediate printing speed and low Z-distance between printing head and substrate. Also, a textile treatment by washing and desizing can improve the adhesion of an afterwards applied 3D print. The presented results are quite useful for future developments of 3D printing applications on textile substrates, e.g. to implement new decorative features or protective functions.


2021 ◽  
Vol 50 ◽  
pp. 101301
Author(s):  
A.Z. Zheng ◽  
S.J. Bian ◽  
E. Chaudhry ◽  
J. Chang ◽  
H. Haron ◽  
...  

2018 ◽  
Vol 24 (1) ◽  
pp. 37-45 ◽  
Author(s):  
Minhua Yang ◽  
Xin-guang Lv ◽  
Xiao-jie Liu ◽  
Jia-qing Zhang

Purpose This paper aims to present a method of color three-dimensional (3D) printing based on color adherence. Design/methodology/approach First, experiments of the color effects of 3D printings using different carriers and different printing methods were performed. Second, the color of a specific point could be calculated through a theory of dimension-reducing, and the color distribution of 3D model was transformed from 3D to 1D color line corresponding with 3D print sequence. At last, the color lines, which were printed on a PE film by silk-screen printing, was carried by a filament and then printed through a fused deposition modeling 3D printer. Findings The printing ink and PE film are suitable as the pigment and carrier under this investigation, respectively. Based on an idea of reducing dimension, the method of 3D color printing through adhering color to a filament is realized. The color saturation of the sample was relatively high through the method. Research limitations/implications It is hard to avoid that there may be some residual color in the nozzle through this method, and the purity of following color will be affected. As a result, continuous improvements should be made to perfect the method. Practical implications An approach of 3D color printing is described in detail, and what kind of model is more applicable is discussed particularly. Originality/value This approach is implemented to print color 3D objects with just one nozzle by means of color adherence. That is, printing the 3D objects using the filament is carried out with 1D color line, which is printed by a traditional printing method.


Author(s):  
Ryuichi Shimizu ◽  
Ze-Jun Ding

Monte Carlo simulation has been becoming most powerful tool to describe the electron scattering in solids, leading to more comprehensive understanding of the complicated mechanism of generation of various types of signals for microbeam analysis.The present paper proposes a practical model for the Monte Carlo simulation of scattering processes of a penetrating electron and the generation of the slow secondaries in solids. The model is based on the combined use of Gryzinski’s inner-shell electron excitation function and the dielectric function for taking into account the valence electron contribution in inelastic scattering processes, while the cross-sections derived by partial wave expansion method are used for describing elastic scattering processes. An improvement of the use of this elastic scattering cross-section can be seen in the success to describe the anisotropy of angular distribution of elastically backscattered electrons from Au in low energy region, shown in Fig.l. Fig.l(a) shows the elastic cross-sections of 600 eV electron for single Au-atom, clearly indicating that the angular distribution is no more smooth as expected from Rutherford scattering formula, but has the socalled lobes appearing at the large scattering angle.


Author(s):  
D. R. Liu ◽  
S. S. Shinozaki ◽  
R. J. Baird

The epitaxially grown (GaAs)Ge thin film has been arousing much interest because it is one of metastable alloys of III-V compound semiconductors with germanium and a possible candidate in optoelectronic applications. It is important to be able to accurately determine the composition of the film, particularly whether or not the GaAs component is in stoichiometry, but x-ray energy dispersive analysis (EDS) cannot meet this need. The thickness of the film is usually about 0.5-1.5 μm. If Kα peaks are used for quantification, the accelerating voltage must be more than 10 kV in order for these peaks to be excited. Under this voltage, the generation depth of x-ray photons approaches 1 μm, as evidenced by a Monte Carlo simulation and actual x-ray intensity measurement as discussed below. If a lower voltage is used to reduce the generation depth, their L peaks have to be used. But these L peaks actually are merged as one big hump simply because the atomic numbers of these three elements are relatively small and close together, and the EDS energy resolution is limited.


1999 ◽  
Vol 97 (11) ◽  
pp. 1173-1184 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. Berardi, M. Fehervari, C. Zannoni

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