Sterile environment for additive manufacturing
10000009 ยท 2018-06-19
Inventors
Cpc classification
B29C64/106
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C64/118
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C64/112
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C2791/005
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29L2031/772
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
B29C64/112
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C64/106
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C64/255
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
In sterile, additive manufacturing wherein one lamella is successively built upon an underlying lamella until an object is completed, a sterile manufacturing environment is provided. A major chamber large enough to accommodate the manufactured object has sterile accordion pleated sidewalls and a sterile top closed with flap valves. A minor chamber for supporting the nozzles positioned above the major chamber has similar valves in corresponding positions. Nozzles for material deposition penetrate the pair of valves to block air and particles from entry into the major chamber where the nozzles make layer by layer deposition of the object using XY areawise nozzle motion relative to the object as well as Z nozzle vertical motion with the major chamber expanding as the object is formed.
Claims
1. A sterile environment apparatus for additive manufacturing comprising: a minor sterile chamber, a major material deposition sterile chamber adjacently connected to the minor sterile chamber and arranged for removable entry of at least one material deposition nozzle through a set of valves associated with each chamber wherein the valves are aligned for sequential penetration through valves of the minor chamber, then the adjacent major material deposition chamber; and accordion pleated sidewalls associated with both of the sterile chambers, the major material deposition chamber having an expansion motion controller in a first direction and areawise motion control for layer-by-layer deposition of an object perpendicular to the first direction; wherein removing of the at least one material deposition nozzle through the set of valves of each chamber maintains the chambers in a sterile condition for storage and transport of the deposited object within the sterile accordion pleated major material deposition chamber.
2. The apparatus of claim 1 wherein the at least one material deposition nozzle comprises first and second nozzles.
3. The apparatus of claim 2 wherein the first nozzle is a material extrusion nozzle.
4. The apparatus of claim 2 wherein the second nozzle is an inkjet nozzle.
5. The apparatus of claim 2 wherein the first and second nozzles are material extrusion nozzles.
6. The apparatus of claim 2 wherein the first and second nozzles are inkjet nozzles.
7. The apparatus of claim 3 wherein the material extrusion nozzle is connected to receive heated extrusion material from a motor driven material extruder.
8. The apparatus of claim 1 wherein the areawise motion control is below said object.
9. The apparatus of claim 1 wherein the areawise motion control is above said object.
10. The apparatus of claim 1 wherein the expansion motion controller is below said object.
11. The apparatus of claim 1 wherein the expansion motion controller is above said object.
12. A sterile environment apparatus for additive manufacturing comprising: a sterile major chamber associated with a work table for supporting an object to be manufactured, the chamber having accordion pleated sidewalls having a top closure with a first valve sealable entry port for at least one removable nozzle; and a sterile minor chamber supported over the first valve sealable entry port of the major chamber with nozzle holders in positions corresponding to the first valve sealable entry port, the minor chamber having a top closure with a second valve sealable entry port for the at least one removable nozzle; wherein removing of the at least one nozzle through the set of valve sealable entry ports maintains the accordion pleated major chamber in a sterile condition for storage and transport of the deposited object within the major chamber.
13. The apparatus of claim 12 wherein the major chamber has accordion pleated sidewalls made of filter paper material.
14. The apparatus of claim 12 wherein the work table is mounted on an XY movable table.
15. The apparatus of claim 12 wherein the work table is mounted on a fixed table.
16. The apparatus of claim 12 where the major chamber has accordion pleated sidewalls made of two materials including a portion made of filter paper material and a portion made of transparent material.
17. The apparatus of claim 12 having two nozzles, including a nozzle having extruded material and a nozzle being an inkjet nozzle.
18. The apparatus of claim 12 having two nozzles, including two inkjet nozzles.
19. The apparatus of claim 12 having two nozzles, including a nozzle having extruded material and a nozzle dispensing support polymer material.
20. The apparatus of claim 12 wherein the first and second valve sealable entry ports are flap valves, each having multiple elastomeric flap members hinged to open downwardly towards the work table with a central entry port area.
21. The apparatus of claim 13 wherein the filter paper material is a nonwoven fiber fabric material.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(8) With reference to
(9) The work table 17 is mounted to an XY table in the base of manufacturing equipment in a fixed manner in the orientation best applicable to the item being printed. Of critical importance is that the baseplate be restricted from independent X, Y motion, apart from the XY table on which it rests, as well as independent deflection in the Z orientation apart from the previously mentioned Z motion in a robot arm during the printing process to maintain dimensional integrity of the item being printed. Alternatively, the XY motion is provided by overhead rails moving the printheads and no XY table is needed.
(10) Flexible, accordion-style pleated sides of major chamber 15 resemble a Chinese lantern or an upside-down origami cone with the lantern or cone attached and sealed to the work table to maintain the sterile barrier. The work table 17 is attached to rails that are part of an XY table that provides relative XY motion to the printheads during 3D manufacturing. Sidewalls of the major chamber are moved via clips or elastic straps 23, 25, 27 and 29 by coordination with the XY table to keep the sides of the major chamber 15 from contacting the printed object during the manufacturing process. To facilitate changes in volume of the chamber, a panel or portion of the side or top would be constructed of accordion pleated Tyvek nonwoven fiber fabric or equivalent breathable sterile barrier. The entire accordion-style sidewall structure could be constructed of Tyvek nonwoven fiber fabric or equivalent to provide sufficient breathability. Portions of the sidewall structure could also be constructed of Mylar polyethylene terephthalate (PET) film or nylon to facilitate visual inspection of the item being manufactured during processing. The sidewall structure could be provided with a peelable portion to allow easy access to the printed item once the sterile barrier can be broken for use.
(11) Additionally, quick-detachable and disposable printheads or disposable material extrusion heads, described below in
(12) With reference to
(13) In
(14) A key feature of the invention is the sequential valving of entry ports for nozzles moving into the major chamber. With reference to
(15) With reference to
(16) Printing by the nozzles is controlled by a computer, not shown, having software that guides layer-by-layer formation of biological or other lamellas. Material used is supplied through supply lines 35 and 37. Ultraviolet or infrared lamps, not shown, may be placed on the underside of the top closure of the major chamber for accelerating curing of the lamellas. The material dispensed by the nozzles may be material for forming the desired object or one of the nozzles may carry structural support material. Software guides relative X, Y and Z motion of the nozzles from the shown starting position for printing at coordinates 0, 0, 0. As each XY layer is printed or otherwise formed, Z motion is incrementally increased and straps 23 and 27 are appropriately pulled by strap guide control 59 that is coordinated with the XY table to keep sides of the major chamber out of the way of the nozzles 41 and 43. As straps are pulled up, sidewalls of the major chamber filter air passing through the sidewalls to equalize pressure inside of the major chamber. Chamber material is selected for the desired quality of filtration. Tyvek nonwoven fiber fabric material removes most particles yet allows air entry.
(17) With reference to
(18) The filament is a resistive heating element, such as a nichrome wire that has a thin insulative coating so that when the wire is coiled, adjacent turns will not short. Only a few turns are stored on the sterile filament supply so that a significant amount of heat is not lost in the supply reel 84 that is energized by a DC voltage from power supply 94. Most of the filament wraps around the material tube 85 to cause sterile material from the material supply bin 82 to flow. The distal end of the filament contacts well 95 which has a ground contact 96 to complete the heating circuit.
(19) The material tube 85 and the surrounding sleeve, as well as the extrusion printhead 83, but not a connected gear driving servomotor, not shown, as well as heat sink 89 with a material well, and nozzle 41 are all disposable. Disposing of the material contacting members maintains the compositional integrity of objects being formed by excluding old material.
(20) In the alternate embodiment of
(21) When an object is completed, nozzles are withdrawn and discarded. The major chamber may removed in a sealed room to protect the manufactured object and then may also be discarded. Before discarding the major chamber, the inside sidewalls of the major chamber may be tested for bacterial or other contamination in order to certify the integrity of the manufactured object. When withdrawing the nozzles, the minor chamber may become contaminated with printing residue. The minor chamber is preferably replaced, together with the nozzle support, at the same time as the major chamber.