Close Menu
AM ChronicleAM Chronicle
  • Content
    • News
    • Insights
    • Case Studies
    • AM Infocast
  • Focus Regions
    • India
    • Asia Pacific
    • Middle East
    • North America
    • Europe
  • Industries
    • Automotive
    • Aerospace
    • Defence
    • Energy
    • Construction
    • Healthcare
    • Tooling
    • Engineering
  • Training
  • Magazine
    • Digital Issues
  • Events
Facebook Instagram YouTube LinkedIn
  • About us
  • Media Kit
  • Contact us
Facebook Instagram YouTube LinkedIn
AM ChronicleAM Chronicle
  • Content
    1. News
    2. Insights
    3. Case Studies
    4. AM Infocast
    5. View All
    Marvin Raupert – an engineer on the project – pictured with a model demonstrating the 3D printing process., Credits: Leibniz University

    Leibniz University Researchers Successfully Demonstrate Metal 3D Printing in Microgravity

    August 30, 2025
    Rocket Lab Signs MoU with Nikon SLM Solutions for Next-Generation Ultra-Large Metal AM Platform

    Rocket Lab Signs MoU with Nikon SLM Solutions for Next-Generation Ultra-Large Metal AM Platform

    August 29, 2025
    Honeywell-Led Consortium Secures £14.1 Million for AI-Driven Additive Manufacturing in Aerospace Sector

    Honeywell-Led Consortium Secures £14.1 Million for AI-Driven Additive Manufacturing in Aerospace Sector

    August 29, 2025
    Credits: WFIRM

    WFIRM to Test 3D Bioprinted Liver Tissue Onboard the ISS

    August 25, 2025
    Making Milestones: 3D printing for a greener tomorrow

    Making Milestones: 3D printing for a greener tomorrow

    August 29, 2025
    Nestlé embraces technology and innovation in 3D printing

    Nestlé embraces technology and innovation in 3D printing

    August 29, 2025
    Pure copper and copper alloy (CuCrZr, CuCrNb, CuSn10) samples produced using ADDIREEN's green-laser powder bed fusion AM machines (Image courtesy: Addireen Technologies)

    Addireen: Pioneering Copper Printing in Metal Additive Manufacturing

    August 12, 2025
    Digital Twin Integration in Additive Manufacturing Systems: Revolutionizing Design, Production, and Lifecycle Management

    Digital Twin Integration in Additive Manufacturing Systems: Revolutionizing Design, Production, and Lifecycle Management

    July 4, 2025
    Source: Formlabs

    Case Study: Eaton Corporation’s Strategic Transition to In-House 3D Printing for Tooling Applications

    August 29, 2025
    Revolutionizing Atherosclerosis Research with 3D-Bioprinted Brain Vessels

    Revolutionizing Atherosclerosis Research with 3D-Bioprinted Brain Vessels

    August 25, 2025
    Formlabs fuse 1+

    How Imaginarium Helped Kaash Studio Scale with the Right 3D Printing Technology

    April 12, 2025
    The Formlabs Fuse 1+ 30W

    Kaash Studio Optimized Service Bureau Operations with Formlabs 3D Printers- Case Study

    January 30, 2025
    Sustainable Production of Metal Powder for Additive Manufacturing

    Sustainable Production of Metal Powder for Additive Manufacturing with Bruce Bradshaw

    February 15, 2024
    Meeting Evolving Customer Demands in the Additive Manufacturing Industry with Tyler Reid

    Meeting Evolving Customer Demands in the Additive Manufacturing Industry with Tyler Reid

    February 9, 2024
    Innovation is at the heart of AMUG with Diana Kalisz

    Innovation is at the heart of AMUG with Diana Kalisz

    March 7, 2023
    3D Printing Workshops at AMUG with Edward Graham

    3D Printing Workshops at AMUG with Edward Graham

    March 7, 2023
    Marvin Raupert – an engineer on the project – pictured with a model demonstrating the 3D printing process., Credits: Leibniz University

    Leibniz University Researchers Successfully Demonstrate Metal 3D Printing in Microgravity

    August 30, 2025
    Making Milestones: 3D printing for a greener tomorrow

    Making Milestones: 3D printing for a greener tomorrow

    August 29, 2025
    Nestlé embraces technology and innovation in 3D printing

    Nestlé embraces technology and innovation in 3D printing

    August 29, 2025
    Source: Formlabs

    Case Study: Eaton Corporation’s Strategic Transition to In-House 3D Printing for Tooling Applications

    August 29, 2025
  • Focus Regions
    • India
    • Asia Pacific
    • Middle East
    • North America
    • Europe
  • Industries
    • Automotive
    • Aerospace
    • Defence
    • Energy
    • Construction
    • Healthcare
    • Tooling
    • Engineering
  • Training
  • Magazine
    • Digital Issues
  • Events
Subscribe
AM ChronicleAM Chronicle
Home » News

New 3D printing method designed by Stanford engineers promises faster printing with multiple materials

News By AM Chronicle Editorial TeamSeptember 29, 20224 Mins Read
iCLIP method for 3D printing
A model of Kyiv’s Saint Sophia Cathedral in the blue and yellow of the Ukrainian flag, made using the iCLIP method for 3D printing, which allows for the use of multiple types – or colors – of resin in a single object. (Image credit: William Pan)
LinkedIn Twitter Facebook WhatsApp Pinterest Email Copy Link

Stanford engineers have designed a method of 3D printing that is 5 to 10 times faster than the quickest high-resolution printer currently available and is capable of using multiple types of resin in a single object.

More from the News 

Advancements in 3D printing have made it easier for designers and engineers to customize projects, create physical prototypes at different scales, and produce structures that can’t be made with more traditional manufacturing techniques. But the technology still faces limitations – the process is slow and requires specific materials which, for the most part, must be used one at a time.

Researchers at Stanford have developed a method of 3D printing that promises to create prints faster, using multiple types of resin in a single object. Their design, published recently in Science Advances, is 5 to 10 times faster than the quickest high-resolution printing method currently available and could potentially allow researchers to use thicker resins with better mechanical and electrical properties.

“This new technology will help to fully realize the potential of 3D printing,” says Joseph DeSimone, the Sanjiv Sam Gambhir Professor in Translational Medicine and professor of radiology and of chemical engineering at Stanford and corresponding author on the paper. “It will allow us to print much faster, helping to usher in a new era of digital manufacturing, as well as to enable the fabrication of complex, multi-material objects in a single step.”

Controlling the flow of resin

The new design improves on a method of 3D printing created by DeSimone and his colleagues in 2015 called continuous liquid interface production, or CLIP. CLIP printing looks like it belongs in a science fiction movie – a rising platform smoothly pulls the object, seemingly fully formed, from a thin pool of resin. The resin at the surface is hardened into the right shape by a sequence of UV images projected through the pool, while a layer of oxygen prevents curing at the bottom of the pool and creates a “dead zone” where the resin remains in liquid form.

The dead zone is the key to CLIP’s speed. As the solid piece rises, the liquid resin is supposed to fill in behind it, allowing for smooth, continuous printing. But this doesn’t always happen, especially if the piece rises too quickly or the resin is particularly viscous. With this new method, called injection CLIP, or iCLIP, the researchers have mounted syringe pumps on top of the rising platform to add additional resin at key points.

“The resin flow in CLIP is a very passive process – you’re just pulling the object up and hoping that suction can bring material to the area where it’s needed,” says Gabriel Lipkowitz, a PhD student in mechanical engineering at Stanford and lead author on the paper. “With this new technology, we actively inject resin onto the areas of the printer where it’s needed.”

The resin is delivered through conduits that are printed simultaneously with the design. The conduits can be removed after the object is completed or they can be incorporated into the design the same way that veins and arteries are built into our own body.

Multi-material printing

By injecting additional resin separately, iCLIP presents the opportunity to print with multiple types of resin over the course of the printing process – each new resin simply requires its own syringe. The researchers tested the printer with as many as three different syringes, each filled with resin dyed a different color. They successfully printed models of famous buildings from several countries in the color of each country’s flag, including Saint Sophia Cathedral in the blue and yellow of the Ukrainian flag and Independence Hall in American red, white, and blue.

“The ability to make objects with variegated material or mechanical properties is a holy grail of 3D printing,” Lipkowitz says. “The applications range from very efficient energy-absorbing structures to objects with different optical properties and advanced sensors.”

Having successfully demonstrated that iCLIP has the potential to print with multiple resins, DeSimone, Lipkowitz, and their colleagues are working on software to optimize the design of the fluid distribution network for each printed piece. They want to ensure that designers have fine control over the boundaries between resin types and potentially speed up the printing process even further.

“A designer shouldn’t have to understand fluid dynamics to print an object extremely quickly,” Lipkowitz says. “We’re trying to create efficient software that can take a part that a designer wants to print and automatically generate not only the distribution network, but also determine the flow rates to administer different resins to achieve a multi-material goal.”

Subscribe to AM Chronicle Newsletter to stay connected:  https://bit.ly/3fBZ1mP 

Follow us on LinkedIn: https://bit.ly/3IjhrFq 

Visit for more interesting content on additive manufacturing: https://amchronicle.com/

Original Source

3d printing 3D printing research additive manufacturing fast high-resolution Resin Stanford UK
AM Chronicle Editorial Team

The AM Chronicle Editorial Team is a collective of passionate individuals committed to delivering insightful, accurate and engaging stories to additive manufacturing audiences worldwide.

NAMIC GLOBAL AM SUMMIT 2025
LATEST FROM AM
Marvin Raupert – an engineer on the project – pictured with a model demonstrating the 3D printing process., Credits: Leibniz University News

Leibniz University Researchers Successfully Demonstrate Metal 3D Printing in Microgravity

August 30, 20251 Min Read
Making Milestones: 3D printing for a greener tomorrow Insights

Making Milestones: 3D printing for a greener tomorrow

August 29, 20257 Mins Read
Nestlé embraces technology and innovation in 3D printing Insights

Nestlé embraces technology and innovation in 3D printing

August 29, 20253 Mins Read

CONNECT WITH US

  • 126 A, Dhuruwadi, A. V. Nagvekar Marg, Prabhadevi, Mumbai 400025
  • [email protected]
  • +91 022 24306319
Facebook Instagram YouTube LinkedIn

Newsletter

Subscribe to the AM Chronicle mailer to receive latest tech updates and insights from global industry experts.

SUBSCRIBE NOW

Quick Links

  • News
  • Insights
  • Case Studies
  • AM Training
  • AM Infocast
  • AM Magazine
  • Events

Media

  • Advertise with us
  • Sponsored Articles
  • Media Kit

Events

  • AM Conclave 2025
    24-25 September 2025 | ADNEC, Abu Dhabi
  • AMTECH 2025
    3-4 December 2025 | KTPO, Whitefield, Bengaluru
CNT Expositions & Services LLP
© 2025 CNT Expositions & Services LLP.
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookie Policy

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.



0 / 75