ETH and University of Zürich, Institute for Biomedical Engineering, Laboratory of Biosensors and Bioelectronics, Gloriastrasse 35, CH-8092, Zurich, Switzerland.
ETH Zürich, Department of Materials, Laboratory for Nanometallurgy, Vladimir-Prelog-Weg 5, CH-8093, Zurich, Switzerland.
Adv Mater. 2017 May;29(17). doi: 10.1002/adma.201604211. Epub 2017 Jan 4.
Currently, the focus of additive manufacturing (AM) is shifting from simple prototyping to actual production. One driving factor of this process is the ability of AM to build geometries that are not accessible by subtractive fabrication techniques. While these techniques often call for a geometry that is easiest to manufacture, AM enables the geometry required for best performance to be built by freeing the design process from restrictions imposed by traditional machining. At the micrometer scale, the design limitations of standard fabrication techniques are even more severe. Microscale AM thus holds great potential, as confirmed by the rapid success of commercial micro-stereolithography tools as an enabling technology for a broad range of scientific applications. For metals, however, there is still no established AM solution at small scales. To tackle the limited resolution of standard metal AM methods (a few tens of micrometers at best), various new techniques aimed at the micrometer scale and below are presently under development. Here, we review these recent efforts. Specifically, we feature the techniques of direct ink writing, electrohydrodynamic printing, laser-assisted electrophoretic deposition, laser-induced forward transfer, local electroplating methods, laser-induced photoreduction and focused electron or ion beam induced deposition. Although these methods have proven to facilitate the AM of metals with feature sizes in the range of 0.1-10 µm, they are still in a prototype stage and their potential is not fully explored yet. For instance, comprehensive studies of material availability and material properties are often lacking, yet compulsory for actual applications. We address these items while critically discussing and comparing the potential of current microscale metal AM techniques.
目前,增材制造(AM)的重点正在从简单的原型制作转移到实际生产。这一过程的一个驱动因素是 AM 能够构建通过减法制造技术无法获得的几何形状。虽然这些技术通常需要制造最简单的几何形状,但 AM 通过将设计过程从传统加工所施加的限制中解放出来,使能够构建最佳性能所需的几何形状。在微米尺度上,标准制造技术的设计限制更加严重。因此,微尺度 AM 具有很大的潜力,商业微立体光刻工具的快速成功证实了这一点,它是广泛科学应用的一种使能技术。然而,对于金属,在小尺度上仍然没有成熟的 AM 解决方案。为了解决标准金属 AM 方法分辨率有限的问题(最佳情况下也只有几十微米),目前正在开发各种针对微米级及以下的新技术。在这里,我们回顾了这些最近的努力。具体来说,我们介绍了直接墨水书写、电动力学印刷、激光辅助电泳沉积、激光诱导正向转移、局部电镀方法、激光诱导光还原和聚焦电子或离子束诱导沉积等技术。尽管这些方法已被证明可以促进尺寸在 0.1-10 µm 范围内的金属的 AM,但它们仍处于原型阶段,其潜力尚未得到充分探索。例如,对材料可用性和材料性能的综合研究往往缺乏,但对于实际应用来说是必需的。我们在批判性地讨论和比较当前微尺度金属 AM 技术的潜力时,解决了这些问题。