Method and Device for the Production of a Three-Dimensional Object
20220055304 · 2022-02-24
Inventors
Cpc classification
C12M33/00
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
B33Y10/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C64/112
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B33Y30/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B33Y40/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B41J3/4073
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C64/379
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
B29C64/188
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B33Y10/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B33Y30/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
In a method for the production and/or treatment of a three-dimensional object with a printing material which is dispensed at a target position in the form of discrete three-dimensional printing material elements, a metering device is moved to at least one reservoir in which a supply of printing material is kept and, by means of the metering device, printing material is picked up from that at least one reservoir. The metering device is transported to a target position defined in all three spatial dimensions and, at that target position, a metered quantity of printing material is applied to a substrate or to a three-dimensional object arranged thereon or being constructed thereon, in order to create a printing material element. The creation of a printing material element is repeated until the three-dimensional object has been fully constructed and/or treated. The use of a metering device for picking up, transporting and applying printing material makes it possible for virtually any desired printing materials to be processed and, accordingly, for objects to be produced and/or treated with virtually any desired printing materials.
Claims
1. A method for the production and/or treatment of a three-dimensional printed object with a printing material which is dispensed at a target position in the form of discrete three-dimensional printing material elements, wherein a metering device is moved to at least one reservoir in which a supply of printing material is kept; printing material is picked up from that at least one reservoir by means of the metering device; the metering device is moved to a target position defined in all three spatial dimensions; and, at that target position, a metered quantity of printing material is applied by means of the metering device to a substrate or to a three-dimensional printed object arranged thereon or being constructed thereon, in order to create a printing material element, the creation of a printing material element being repeated until the three-dimensional printed object has been fully constructed and/or treated.
2. The method according to claim 1, wherein a supply of two or more different printing materials is kept; and different printing materials are selected and picked up in order to construct and/or treat the three-dimensional printed object with different printing materials.
3. The method according to claim 1, wherein the printing material or printing materials used are liquids, solids dissolved or suspended in liquids, cellular suspensions or biomaterials.
4. The method according to claim 1, wherein the printing material or printing materials used are penetrable or amorphous solids or frozen substances.
5. The method according to claim 1, wherein printing material or printing materials used are pulverulent or granular solids.
6. The method according to claim 1, wherein by means of the metering device in each case a quantity of printing material is picked up that corresponds quantitatively to a printing material.
7. The method according to claim 1, wherein the quantity of printing material picked up in each case is weighed gravimetrically before application to the substrate or to the three-dimensional printed object arranged thereon or being constructed thereon; and, based on the result of weighing and preset criteria, a decision is made as to whether the quantity picked up is supplemented or discarded and a new quantity picked up.
8. The method according to claim 1, wherein the quantity of printing material applied, in the form of a printing material element, by the metering device in the target position to the substrate or to the three-dimensional printed object arranged thereon or being constructed thereon is hardened and/or fused to the substrate or to the three-dimensional printed object arranged or already partly constructed thereon by application of directed radiation or heat or by some other hardening or polymerising method.
9. The method according to claim 1, wherein the metering device comprises an exchangeable metering tool, the metering tool being discarded and replaced by a fresh metering tool prior to a change of the printing material to be picked up.
10. The method according to claim 1, wherein the metering device comprises a metering tool, the metering tool being cleaned prior to a change of the printing material to be picked up.
11. The method according to claim 1, wherein the construction and/or treatment of the three-dimensional printed object is partly effected by means of an additional printing system which is itself likewise configured for the production and/or treatment of a three-dimensional printed object, in which case printing material elements are applied to the substrate or to the three-dimensional printed object arranged thereon or being constructed thereon both by means of the metering device and by means of the additional printing system.
12. The method according to claim 1, wherein at least one printing material is configured so that the printing material element applied to the substrate or to the three-dimensional printed object arranged thereon or being constructed thereon has a material-removing action, so that material is removed from the three-dimensional printed object.
13. The method according to claim 12, wherein the material-removing action occurs only after activation of the printing material element, especially after activation by means of heat or radiation.
14. The method according to claim 12, wherein the at least one printing material is an acid or a solvent.
15. The method according to claim 1, wherein at least one printing material is configured so that the printing material element applied to the substrate to the three-dimensional printed object arranged thereon or being constructed thereon modifies the physical or chemical properties of the three-dimensional printed object point by point.
16. The method according to claim 1, wherein by means of the metering device different printing materials are picked up one after the other from at least two reservoirs and transported to a target position defined in all three spatial dimensions and, at that position, the different printing materials are applied one after the other to the substrate or to the three-dimensional printed object arranged thereon or being constructed thereon.
17. The method according to claim 1, wherein by means of the metering device different printing materials are picked up one after the other from at least two reservoirs, transported to a target position defined in all three spatial dimensions and, at that position, applied to the substrate or to the three-dimensional printed object arranged thereon or being constructed thereon, the different printing materials being mixed with one another in the metering device prior to application.
18. The method according to claim 1, wherein the metering device has at least two metering channels by means of which printing material or printing materials is/are picked up, one after the other or simultaneously, from one or more reservoirs and then transported to at least one target position defined in all three spatial dimensions and, at that position, applied to the substrate or to the three-dimensional printed object arranged thereon or being constructed thereon.
19. A device for the production and/or treatment of a three-dimensional printed object with a printing material, having an apparatus for dispensing printing material in the form of discrete three-dimensional printing material elements at a target position, comprising: at least one reservoir in which a supply of printing material (M, N, O) is kept, a metering device which is configured to pick up printing material from the at least one reservoir, and a transport device which is configured to move the metering device to the at least one reservoir and to transport the metering device to a target position defined in all three spatial dimensions, wherein the metering device is configured to apply the printing material that it has picked up, at this target position, in a metered amount, to a substrate or to a three-dimensional printed object arranged thereon or being constructed thereon, wherein it has at least one radiation source for high-precision action on the printing material quantity applied to the substrate of to the three-dimensional printed object arranged thereon or being constructed thereon.
20. The device according to claim 19, wherein the metering device has at least one metering tool provided in a holder, which metering tool is configured to be installed in a metering head of the metering device and removed again therefrom; the transport device is configured to move the metering head to the metering tool provided in the holder and to install the metering tool in the metering head; and the transport device is further configured to move the metering device together with the installed metering tool over the reservoir and to dip the metering tool into the supply of printing material kept therein, whereby a defined quantity of the printing material can be picked up by the metering tool.
21. The device according to claim 19, wherein the transport device comprises a handling robot controlled by a control computer, which robot has a spatial positioning accuracy of at least 100-200 μm, preferably down to 1-2 μm.
22. The device according to claim 19, further comprising a plurality of reservoirs for the same or different printing materials; and the reservoirs are formed by individual containers 7 or by a plate which preferably has a plurality of wells.
23. The device according to claim 19, further comprising a plurality of metering tools provided in the holder; and the metering tools are in the form of tubes or capillaries of different sizes into which printing material can be introduced and dispensed again therefrom.
24. The device according to claim 23, wherein the tubes have a plunger movable therein, it being possible for a defined quantity of printing material to be picked up by drawing in liquid printing material by retraction of the plunger and to be dispensed from the tube again by forward movement of the plunger.
25. The device according to claim 23, wherein the tubes have a plunger movable therein, it being possible for a defined quantity of printing material to be picked up by insertion of a tube into solid or amorphous printing material or powder or granules and to be dispensed from the tube again by forward movement of the plunger.
26. The device according to claim 19, further comprising a plurality of metering tools provided in the holder; and the metering tools are in the form of disposable syringes.
27. The device according to claim 19, further comprising a plurality of metering tools provided in the holder; and the metering tools are in the form of differently sized rods, to one end of which printing material adheres when the rod is dipped into printing material.
28. The device according to claim 19, further comprising has a heater or radiation source for heating the metering tool in the state in which it is installed in the metering head.
29. The device according to claim 19, further comprising the at least one radiation source is arranged on the metering head.
30. (canceled)
31. The device according to claim 19, wherein the metering tool is configured so that the radiation emitted by the at least one radiation source is conductible through the metering tool to the applied printing material quantity.
32. The device according to claim 19, wherein the at least one radiation source is configured for the melting or hardening of printing material.
33. The device according to claim 19, further comprising two or more reservoirs for different printing materials; and it is configured for selecting printing material from different reservoirs and for picking up that printing material in the metering device, it being possible for the three-dimensional object to be constructed from two or more different printing materials.
34. The device according to claim 19, further comprising at least one additional independent printing system which is itself likewise configured for the production and/or treatment of a three-dimensional object.
35. The device according to claim 34, wherein it is configured for constructing and/or treating the three-dimensional object partly by means of the metering device and partly by means of the additional printing system.
36. The device according to claim 19, wherein the metering device has at least two metering channels by means of which printing material or printing materials can be picked up, one after the other or simultaneously, from one or more reservoirs and then transported to at least one target position defined in all three spatial dimensions and, at that position, applied to the substrate or to the three-dimensional object arranged thereon or being constructed thereon.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0053] The invention is described in greater detail below with reference to exemplary embodiments shown in the drawings, wherein:
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DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0064] The following observations apply in respect of the description which follows: where, for the purpose of clarity of the drawings, reference signs are included in a Figure but are not mentioned in the directly associated part of the description, reference should be made to the explanation of those reference signs in the preceding or subsequent parts of the description. Conversely, to avoid overcomplication of the drawings, reference signs that are less relevant for immediate understanding are not included in all Figures. In that case, reference should be made to the other Figures.
[0065] The units of quantity of the printing material applied to the respective support (the substrate or the three-dimensional object arranged or being constructed thereon) in each printing step are referred to as printing material elements irrespective of their specific geometric form. In the context of the invention, printing material elements are to be understood both as being points of printing material in the narrower sense and as being linear or planar printing material structures.
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[0067] On the base plate 1 there are arranged a holder 30 for metering tools 24, (here, for example, three) reservoirs 41, 42 and 43 for, in this case, different printing materials M, N, O, an analytical balance 50 with a substrate 60 clamped thereon, a waste container 70 for used metering tools 24, and a radiation source 80.
[0068] The metering head 22 is configured, with the aid of the handling robot 10, to pick up metering tools 24, deploy them and release them again. The metering head 22, together with a picked-up metering tool 24, forms a metering device 20. The metering device 20 shown in the drawing corresponds to the prior art, as illustrated, for example, by the documents WO 2016/074105 A1 or WO 2017/152293 A1. The metering head 22 can, however, also be realised in some other way, provided it is configured to pick up, deploy and release metering tools. The metering device can also, for example, be formed by a commercial metering device, such as a liquid handler, cartridge dispenser, etc.
[0069] The handling robot 10 allows the metering device 20 to move in different spatial axes so that the metering device is able to travel both to printing material reservoirs and to any desired point on the three-dimensional object to be printed.
[0070] The holder 30 holds a number of metering tools 24. The metering tools 24 are in the form of tubes or capillaries 241 with a plunger 242 sliding therein (see also
[0071] Alternatively, the metering tools can also be in the form of commercial automatic pipettes having disposable tips or syringes, which function, for example, in accordance with the air displacement principle or the positive displacement principle. Their functioning is familiar to the person skilled in the art and is therefore not described in further detail.
[0072] As a further alternative, the metering tools can also be simply in the form of non-hollow solid bodies without a cavity, for example in the form of thin rods to which a small quantity of substance adheres when they are dipped/inserted into the printing material, which quantity can then be dispensed on the three-dimensional object (for example by the application of a dot of substance, see also
[0073] The reservoirs 41, 42 and 43 hold a supply of three or more different printing materials M, N and O. Alternatively, the printing materials can also be provided in other types of vessel, for example in plates having a plurality of wells (for example, what are known as microtitre plates, MTP), in which small quantities of printing material are stored (see also
[0074] In an advantageous embodiment, the supply of printing materials provided in the reservoirs comprises most diverse materials at the same time, for example different liquids, solids (for example waxy, granular or pulverulent), and also frozen liquids (“Cryo-3D printing”), solutions and suspensions, ranging through to whole cell cultures having living cells, which are stored in suitable vessels. This means that for each defined point of the three-dimensional object it is possible exactly to define which of the stored materials can be used, this further allowing the production of objects with a greater range and complexity of materials than possible hitherto. In addition to the use of printing materials from which a three-dimensional object is constructed additively, it is of course also possible to employ materials that remove existing structures/objects point by point, for example by etching away/dissolving away with acids or solvents, respectively.
[0075] It is also possible for supplies of only relatively small quantities of printing materials to be kept in the reservoirs 41, 42 and 43. The filling and, if applicable, refilling of those reservoirs can then be effected from corresponding sources either by means of the metering device 20 or by means of a separate metering device. This variant is especially advantageous, for example, if some of the printing materials used are to be produced in a different device (for example a synthesis device or formulation device) physically close to the printing device and are to be used for testing in the printing device. In that case it would be advantageous to use a device having small wells (for example a microtitre plate) as reservoir (see also
[0076] An alternative option is not to keep a supply of the printing materials but to produce them directly on the device by means of suitable tools and methods. This can especially be important if the printing material itself cures rapidly once it has been synthesised or formulated (for example two-component adhesives etc.).
[0077] The substrate 60 clamped on the analytical balance 50 serves as base for the three-dimensional object P to be constructed.
[0078] The radiation source 80, which, for example, is in the form of a laser or UV radiation source, serves to harden/cross-link or fuse individual printing material elements to one another (for details see below). The radiation source can advantageously be mounted in the printing device and be controllable (by the control computer C) so that it is able specifically to irradiate any desired point in the space above the substrate in order to melt(fuse), to harden or to crosslink the material located at that point. In another advantageous embodiment, the radiation source is mounted directly on the metering head 22 and is oriented so that it is always exactly targeted on the tip of the metering tool 24 installed in the metering head 22, so that a printing material element dispensed at that location can be fused, hardened or crosslinked immediately after it has been dispensed (see also
[0079] The analytical balance 50 serves for gravimetric measurement of the quantity of printing material dispensed by the metering device 20. Alternatively or in addition, the quantity of printing material picked up by the metering device can advantageously also be measured gravimetrically by means of a further analytical balance. One possibility is for the reservoirs to be arranged on an analytical balance so that the quantities of printing material removed therefrom can be determined. An especially suitable arrangement for determining the quantities of printing material picked up by the metering device or by the metering tool thereof is shown diagrammatically in
[0080] In that arrangement the metering head 22 is suspended on an analytical balance 52 via a connection piece 522, so that the analytical balance 52 measures the weight of the metering head 22 with all the objects, especially a metering tool 24, attached thereto. The analytical balance 52 is connected via a connection piece 524 to the handling robot 10 (not shown herein). As can also be seen from
[0081] By means of the analytical balance 52 the weight of a clamped metering tool 24 with or without picked-up printing material can be measured before and after the printing material has been picked up and also after the printing material has been dispensed. In this way the quantity of printing material element to be applied to the three-dimensional object can be accurately determined. On the basis of the quantity of material measured it is also possible to decide whether the printing material element in question should be applied at all or is to be discarded. If the quantity is too small, the metering tool can, for example, be inserted or dipped into the corresponding reservoir once more in order to pick up additional printing material. If the quantity is too large, the metering tool can be discarded and fresh printing material picked up using a different, possibly smaller metering tool.
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[0083] After the printing material quantity N0 has been picked up/drawn up into the metering tool 24, the metering tool is lifted out of the printing material N again (
[0084] If further printing material elements of the same type are then to be used for constructing the object P, the dipping/picking up/dispensing sequence as described in
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[0089] As shown in
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[0091] The movements of the metering head 22 by means of the handling robot 10 in the three spatial directions for picking up or discarding a metering tool 24, for dipping the metering tool 24 into a printing material and for removing it therefrom, and for positioning the metering tool at the desired deposition location on the substrate 60 or on the three-dimensional object P being constructed thereon, are controlled by the control computer C as in the exemplary embodiment shown in
[0092] For that purpose, the control computer uses process control information which, for each individual point to be printed (or for each line if the metering tool is being moved in one or more spatial axes during dispensing), comprises the spatial coordinates thereof, the identity of the material and the quantity of material as well as the printing sequence of all individual points of the three-dimensional object.
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[0095] The device according to the invention can also have a heater 26 (shown diagrammatically only in
[0096] A second exemplary embodiment of the device according to the invention for the production of a three-dimensional object is shown diagrammatically and in a highly simplified form in
[0097] In this exemplary embodiment, a plurality (in this case specifically two) radiation sources 81 and 82 are mounted directly on the metering head 22 and oriented so that they are targeted on the tip of the metering tool 24 installed in the metering head 22. This allows a plurality of different printing materials that make different demands on the radiation source for hardening or melting to be used in the device, without the device as a whole being altered.
[0098] A control computer C again controls the handling robot 10 and the (in this case two) radiation sources 81 and 82 and also the metering head 22 in the way already explained in connection with the first exemplary embodiment.
[0099] In addition, in this second exemplary embodiment an independent printing system 90 is also integrated into the printing device 100′, which printing system is itself likewise configured for the production of a three-dimensional object. The additional printing system 90 can be provided, for example, by a conventional 3D printer.
[0100] In the example shown in the drawing, the additional printing system 90 comprises a drive device, denoted as a whole by reference numeral 110, by means of which, on the one hand, a plate-like substrate support 61, to which a substrate 60 is attached, can be moved forwards and backwards (arrow 110x) in its plane and upwards and downwards (arrow 110z) perpendicular to its plane and, on the other hand, a print head 122, on which a metering device 124 is mounted, can be moved to the left and right (arrow 110y) parallel to the plane of the substrate support 61. Overall the metering device 124 can accordingly be moved into any desired spatial position relative to the substrate support 61 or relative to the substrate 60 attached thereto. The metering device 124 is supplied with a printing material, for example a liquid printing material, from a reservoir 140 via a line 146, and the metering device 124 is configured to dispense printing material point by point in order to construct a three-dimensional object P therefrom on the substrate 60. The additional printing system 90 is, as already mentioned, provided by a conventional 3D printer and therefore does not require more detailed explanation. In principle a large number of different 3D printer types and technologies can be used for the additional printing system 90, for example also the 3D printer described in the document NL 2 017 088 A.
[0101] The handling robot 10 is likewise able to move the metering device 20, consisting of a metering head 22 and a metering tool 24, attached thereto to any desired spatial position relative to the substrate support 61 or relative to the substrate 60 attached thereto, so that, as already explained above, a three-dimensional object P can also be constructed on the substrate 60 by means of the metering device 20. Accordingly, both the metering device 20 and the metering device 124 of the integrated printing system 90 are then capable of working on the same object P being constructed on the substrate 60. In that case the control computer C assumes the control of the additional printing system 90 as well as the coordination of the processes, in order, on the one hand, to prevent collisions and, on the other hand, to ensure optimum construction of the object.
[0102] This second exemplary embodiment of the device according to the invention has the advantage that it is capable of more universal use. Thus, a three-dimensional object can be constructed either by means of the metering device 20 or by means of the integrated printing system 90 or, advantageously, by means of both in combination. For example, the integrated printing system 90 could construct the basic structure of the object being produced, while further structures made of printing materials not processible by the integrated printing system 90 could be added by means of the metering device 20. In order even further to increase the range of possible applications of the device according to the invention, the device can also be equipped with two or more additional printing systems.
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