The round-up of last week’s additive manufacturing news includes, Fiber-infused ink enables 3D-printed heart muscle to beat; Leading Additive Manufacturing companies in Middle East to join AM Conclave; Tvasta receives performance appraisal certificate for their 3D Concrete Printing Technology ; Cambridge researchers first 3D-printed concrete wall with sensors and more.

3D Concrete Printing Technology from Tvasta receives Performance Appraisal Certificate

Building Materials and Technology Promotion Council (BMTPC) awarded Performance Appraisal Certificate to 3D Concrete Printing Technology by Tvasta Pvt. Ltd.

Desktop Health™ Introduces the PrintRoll™ Rotating Build Platform for the 3D-Bioplotter® 

Desktop Health announced a breakthrough in bioprinting with the launch of PrintRoll™, an innovative rotating build platform that can produce intelligent tubular solutions for the body’s vascular, digestive, respiratory, and reproductive channels on the 3D-Bioplotter premier bioprinting system.

UK Industrial Valve Supplier Kent Introl Adopts Additive Manufacturing with Renishaw Partnership 

UK industrial valve supplier KOSO Kent Introl (Kent Introl) has partnered with global engineering firm Renishaw to explore the benefits of additive manufacturing (AM) processes.

Lithoz and Himed Team Up in Partnership to Drive 3D-Printable Medical-Grade Bioceramics to Next Level

Lithoz GmbH and New York-based biomaterials specialist Himed have entered into a long-term partnership, joining forces in further driving innovation and research into the 3D printing of medical-grade bioceramics.

Cambridge researchers help develop smart, 3D printed concrete wall for National Highways project

Cambridge researchers, working in partnership with industry, have helped develop the first 3D-printed piece of concrete infrastructure to be used on a National Highways project.

NIH grant to facilitate high-speed bioprinting of bones, tracheas, organs at Penn State University

The National Institute of Biomedical Imaging and Engineering at the National Institute of Health has awarded over $2 million in support of the project, led by Ibrahim T. Ozbolat, professor of engineering science and mechanics, biomedical engineering, and neurosurgery at Penn State.

Fiber-infused ink enables 3D-printed heart muscle to beat 

In a paper published in Nature Materials, researchers from the Harvard John A. Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Sciences (SEAS) report the development of a new hydrogel ink infused with gelatin fibers that enables 3D printing of a functional heart ventricle that mimics beating like a human heart.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Jabil Unveils Findings of Global Survey on 3D Printing Technology Trends 

Jabil Inc. announced the findings of its latest global survey of additive manufacturing decision makers, which reinforces the steady ascent of 3D printing technologies and additive materials into production environments.

This 3D Printed Gripper Doesn’t Need Electronics To Function 

The 3D printed soft robotics gripper developed by a team of roboticists at the University of California San Diego, in collaboration with researchers at the BASF corporation doesn’t need any electronics to work.

PolyU Researchers Develop High-Performance Titanium Alloys Through Additive Manufacturing 
Engineering scientists from the Hong Kong Polytechnic University (PolyU), in collaboration with RMIT University and the University of Sydney, have successfully developed high performance titanium alloys using additive manufacturing.

Leading Additive Manufacturing companies in Middle East to join AM Conclave


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Technical Writer, AM Chronicle Chinmay Saraf is a scientific writer living in Indore, India. His academic background is in mechanical engineering, and he has substantial experience in fused deposition-based additive manufacturing. Chinmay possesses an M.Tech. in computer-aided design and computer-aided manufacturing and is enthusiastic about 3D printing, product development, material science, and sustainability. He also has a deep interest in "Frugal Designs" to improve the present technical systems.

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