Programmable filament: Printed filaments for multi-material 3D printing

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Abstract

From full-color objects to functional capacitive artifacts, 3D printing multi-materials became essential to broaden the application areas of digital fabrication. We present Programmable Filament, a novel technique that enables multi-material printing using a commodity FDM 3D printer, requiring no hardware upgrades. Our technique builds upon an existing printing technique in which multiple filament segments are printed and spliced into a single threaded filament. We propose an end-to-end pipeline for 3D printing an object in multi-materials, with an introduction of the design systems for end-users. Optimized for low-cost, single-nozzle FDM 3D printers, the system is built upon our computational analysis and experiments to enhance its validity over various printers and materials to design and produce a programmable filament. Finally, we discuss application examples and speculate the future with its potential, such as custom filament manufacturing on-demand.

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Takahashi, H., Punpongsanon, P., & Kim, J. (2020). Programmable filament: Printed filaments for multi-material 3D printing. In UIST 2020 - Proceedings of the 33rd Annual ACM Symposium on User Interface Software and Technology (pp. 1209–1221). Association for Computing Machinery, Inc. https://doi.org/10.1145/3379337.3415863

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