Scalable 3D printing of aperiodic cellular structures by rotational stacking of integral image formation
Author(s)
Kim, Seok; Handler, Jordan J; Cho, Young Tae; Barbastathis, George; Fang, Nicholas X
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The limitation of projection microstereolithography in additive manufacturing methods is that they typically use a single-aperture imaging configuration, which restricts their ability to produce microstructures in large volumes owing to the trade-off between image resolution and image field area. Here, we propose an integral lithography based on integral image reconstruction coupled with a planar lens array. The individual microlenses maintain a high numerical aperture and are used to create digital light patterns that can expand the printable area by the number of microlenses (103 to 104), thereby allowing for the scalable stereolithographic fabrication of 3D features that surpass the resolution-to-area scaling limit. We extend the capability of integral lithography for programmable printing of deterministic nonperiodic structures through the rotational overlapping or stacking of multiple exposures with controlled angular offsets. This printing platform provides new possibilities for producing periodic and aperiodic microarchitectures spanning four orders of magnitude from micrometers to centimeters.
Date issued
2021-09-17Department
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Mechanical Engineering; Sloan School of Management; Singapore-MIT Alliance in Research and Technology (SMART)Journal
Science Advances
Publisher
American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)
Citation
Kim, Seok, Handler, Jordan J, Cho, Young Tae, Barbastathis, George and Fang, Nicholas X. 2021. "Scalable 3D printing of aperiodic cellular structures by rotational stacking of integral image formation." Science Advances, 7 (38).
Version: Final published version