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Researchers at the University of Melbourne have developed an ultrafast acoustic 3D printing method capable of fabricating complex objects in less than a second.
Technology
1 min read

Researchers at the University of Melbourne have developed an ultrafast acoustic 3D printing method capable of fabricating complex objects in less than a second.

Originally reported by MSN

Researchers at the University of Melbourne have developed an ultrafast acoustic 3D printing method capable of fabricating complex objects in less than a second. This technique uses acoustic waves to precisely position cells, bypassing the penetration limits of light-based methods in opaque materials. This shift increases production speeds by 100x while maintaining high cell viability for tissue engineering. This marks a move toward instantaneous, real-time bio-fabrication. 🔊🔬 #3DPrinting #AdditiveManufacturing #Bioprinting #Innovation #Technology

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