Above: 3D printer makes a "Ship in a Bottle."
Engineers pave the way towards 3D printing of personal electronics Scientists are developing new materials which could one day allow people to print out custom-designed personal electronics such as games controllers which perfectly fit their hand shape.
The University of Warwick researchers
have created a simple and inexpensive conductive plastic composite
that can be used to produce electronic devices using the latest
generation of low-cost 3D printers designed for use by hobbyists and
even in the home.
The material, nicknamed 'carbomorph', enables users to lay down electronic tracks and sensors as part of a 3D printed structure – allowing the printer to create touch-sensitive areas for example, which can then be connected to a simple electronic circuit board.
So far the team has used the material
to print objects with embedded flex sensors or with touch-sensitive
buttons such as computer game controllers or a mug which can tell how
full it is.
The next step is to work on printing
much more complex structures and electronic components including the
wires and cables required to connect the devices to computers.
The research was led by Dr Simon Leigh
in the Department of Engineering at the University of Warwick.
Dr Leigh said: "It's always great
seeing the complex and intricate models of devices such as mobile
phones or television remote controls that can be produced with 3D
printing, but that's it, they are invariably models that don't really
function.
"We set about trying to find a way
in which we could actually print out a functioning electronic device
from a 3D printer.
"In the long term, this technology
could revolutionalise the way we produce the world around us, making
products such as personal electronics a lot more individualised and
unique and in the process reducing electronic waste.
"Designers could also use it to
understand better how people tactilely interact with products by
monitoring sensors embedded into objects.
"However, in the short term I can
see this technology having a major impact in the educational sector
for example, allowing the next generation of young engineers to get
hands-on experience of using advanced manufacturing technology to
design fairly high-tech devices and products right there in the
classroom."
The printed sensors can be monitored
using existing open-source electronics and freely available
programming libraries.
A major advantage of using 3D printing
is that sockets for connection to equipment such as interface
electronics can be printed out instead of connected using conductive
glues or paints.
This research is detailed in the study,
A simple, low-cost conductive composite material for 3D printing of
electronic sensors, published in the open-access journal PLOS
ONE.
The research was funded by the EPSRC
project: Novel 3D Printing Technologies for Maximising Industrial
Impact (Subproject # 30821) and by the EPSRC UK Research Centre In
Nondestructive Evaluation.
Simon Leigh is available on +44 (0)24
761 51357 or S.J.Leigh@warwick.ac.uk
Or you can contact University of
Warwick press officer Anna Blackaby ona.blackaby@warwick.ac.uk or
+44(0)2476 575910 or +44 (0)7785 433155
Crucial pieces of equipment used in
this research were funded through the Science City Research Alliance
(SCRA) Advanced Materials project. SCRA is a strategic research
partnership between the University of Warwick and the University of
Birmingham with a specific remit to work with businesses across the
region. It has benefited from a multi-million pound investment in
equipment and research infrastructure across both institutions via
Birmingham Science City and the European Regional Development Fund.
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