Skip to main content
Stanford spinout Perseus Materials is leveraging frontal polymerization to manufacture large-scale composite parts, recently piloting a 15-foot wind turbine component.
Technology
1 min read

Stanford spinout Perseus Materials is leveraging frontal polymerization to manufacture large-scale composite parts, recently piloting a 15-foot wind turbine component.

Perseus Materials
Perseus Materials

Materials

Originally reported by 3DPrint.com

Stanford spinout Perseus Materials is leveraging frontal polymerization to manufacture large-scale composite parts, recently piloting a 15-foot wind turbine component. 🌬️ By embedding curing energy directly into resins, they eliminate industrial ovens and avoid the defects of traditional layer-by-layer printing. Their modular system currently handles 25-foot parts, aiming to deliver 80-meter structures in days. 🧪 This chemistry-led approach redefines scalability for wind and maritime sectors. 🚢

How This Connects

5 related events
  1. Company story

    Stanford-spinout Perseus Materials secured a strategic investment from Lockheed Martin to scale its self-propagating composite technology.

  2. Same pattern

    The University of Wollongong and Luyten 3D have demonstrated a world-first breakthrough in robotic underwater 3D concrete printing.

  3. Same pattern

    The Catalonia Institute for Energy Research has launched Oxhyd Energy to industrialize 3D printed solid oxide fuel cells and electrolyzers.

  4. Same pattern

    Amaero and entX are scaling the GenX nuclear battery through a 1.8 million dollar AMCRC project in South Australia.

  5. This article

    Stanford spinout Perseus Materials is leveraging frontal polymerization to manufacture large-scale composite parts, recently piloting a 15-foot wind turbine component.

  6. Same pattern

    High-Energy Digital has secured Series A+ funding from Xian Finance and Guangzhou Jinkong to scale its 3D printed solid-state battery production lines.