A 3D printable bio-active glass could be used to repair bone damage and help them grow back, a study suggests. The newly ...
In 2024, the University of Maine unveiled the world’s largest 3D printer, which can print objects up to 29 meters long.
Learn about a new 3D printed skin model, a successful 3D printed skull implant, and more, in this week's 3DExpress!
Tech Xplore on MSN
Advanced sensors peer inside the 'black box' of metal 3D printing
With the ability to print metal structures with complex shapes and unique mechanical properties, metal additive manufacturing ...
Interesting Engineering on MSN
Can glass replace bone? Scientists 3D print bio-glass that mimics skeletal strength
Chinese scientists developed a 3D printable bio-glass that sustained bone growth in rabbits, offering a low-cost path to ...
Budding surgeons may soon train on stretchy, lifelike 3D-printed skin that oozes out blood and pus when cut.
News-Medical.Net on MSN
Pioneering 3D printing technique makes realistic surgical models
Researchers at the University of Minnesota Twin Cities have successfully 3D printed lifelike human tissue structures that can ...
PCMag on MSN
Tariffs Are Making Everything More Expensive. Here's How I'm Using My Old 3D Printer to Offset the Cost
The 3D-printing hype ended years ago, but the threat of tariffs and the closing of the de minimis exemptions means that making your own stuff might actually hold some value.
Researchers created a 3D-printable bioactive glass that supports bone growth in rabbits, offering a low-cost, effective ...
RMIT researchers have created an experimental 3D-printed diamond–titanium device that generates electricity from flowing ...
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