Computed Axial Lithography (CAL) For 3D Additive Manufacturing

Tech ID: 28754 / UC Case 2017-197-0

Patent Status

Country Type Number Dated Case
United States Of America Issued Patent 11,370,173 06/28/2022 2017-197
Japan Issued Patent 7019725 02/04/2022 2017-197
Singapore Issued Patent 11201910543V 12/17/2021 2017-197
United States Of America Issued Patent 10,647,061 05/12/2020 2017-197
China Published Application CN110891761 03/17/2020 2017-197
Australia Published Application WO2018/208378 11/15/2018 2017-197
Canada Published Application WO2018/208378 11/15/2018 2017-197
European Patent Office Published Application WO2018/208378 11/15/2018 2017-197
Rep Of Korea Published Application WO2018/208378 11/15/2018 2017-197
 

Additional Patents Pending

Brief Description

Additive manufacturing fabrication methods are proliferating rapidly, with photopolymer-based approaches comprising some of the most prominent methods. These stereolithographic techniques provide a useful balance of resolution, build speed, process control, and capital cost (system metrics that typically must be traded off one against another). Resolving the speed limitations, surface roughness (stair-step artifacts), and requirements for support structures would provide the next major steps forward in the progress of these technologies.

To address this potential, researchers at UC Berkeley have developed a system and method that accomplishes volumetric fabrication by applying computed tomography techniques in reverse, fabricating structures by exposing a photopolymer resin volume from multiple angles, updating the light field at each angle. The necessary light fields are spatially and/or temporally multiplexed, such that their summed energy dose in a target resin volume crosslinks the resin into a user-defined geometry. These light-fields may be static or dynamic and may be generated by a spatial light modulator that controls either the phase or the amplitude of a light field (or both) to provide the necessary intensity distribution.

Advantages

UC Berkeley's approach surpasses recently-reported volumetric aperiodic 3D structure fabrication using holographic light fields in its geometric flexibility.  Similarly, the inherently volume-based approach of this technology provides an order-of-magnitude improvement in fabrication speed over conventional layer-by-layer "2 1/2D" printing techniques. Finally, the surface roughness problems imposed by layer-by-layer fabrication are substantially reduced if not removed entirely.

Past/current use has included improvement to photopolymer-based additive manufacturing

  • Faster part generation
  • Improved surface quality, no stair step artifacts from layering
  • Reduction of geometric constraints that arise from 2D layer slicing, simplified post-processing

Suggested uses

  • Additive manufacturing generated optics with high quality surface finish
  • Hollow or overhanging structures
  • Large dynamic range mesoscale AM structures
  • Printing/fabrication on a previously fabricated 3D structure immersed in the resin
  • Processing very soft, flexible or brittle polymers and geometrically delicate/fragile structures (as there is no relative structure/fluid motion during printing).

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Inventors

  • Taylor, Hayden K.

Other Information

Keywords

manufacturing, 3D printing

Categorized As