(19) United States
US 20050215744A1
(12) Patent Application Publication (10) Pub. No.: US 2005/0215744 A1
Wiese et al.
(43) Pub. Date: Sep. 29, 2005
(54) COMBINATION OF A MATERIAL AND A
BATH FLUID FOR USE IN RAPID
PROTOTYPING METHODS
(75) Inventors: Hinrich Wiese, Kaufbeuren (DE);
Gerhard Maier, Munchen (DE)
Correspondence Address:
EDWARDS & ANGELL, LLP
P.O. BOX 55874
BOSTON, MA 02205 (US)
(73) Assignee: PolyMaterials AG, Kauibeuren (DE)
(21) Appl. No.: 10/519,894
(22) PCT Filed: Jun. 27, 2003
(86) PCT No.: PCT/EP03/06858
(30) Foreign Application Priority Data
Jun. 28, 2002 (DE) ................................... .. 102 29 124.1
Publication Classification
(51) Int. Cl.7 ................................................. .. C08F 118/02
(52) U.s. Cl. ............................................................ .. 526/319
(57) ABSTRACT
The present invention relates to combinations of a building
material and a bath fluid for methods for directly printing
visual-aid models or elements, in particular, for the use in the
office or at home. Furthermore, the present invention relates
to the polymers obtained by the reaction of the building
material and the bath fluid and to elements or models
produced from the combinations according to the present
invention. The use of the combinations according to the
present invention in rapid prototyping methods enables the
production of elements having varying mechanical proper-
ties. Coloured elements can be obtained by adding colou-
rants. The elements made from the building materials
according to the present invention exhibit mechanical prop-
erties, a thermostability and accuracy in every detail, thus
rendering them suitable as visual-aid models and discussion
models for design, architectural, constructional and other
blueprints. The surface quality, the rigidity and the hardness
of the elements can be improved by post-treatment.
US 2005/0215744 A1
COMBINATION OF A MATERIAL AND A BATH
FLUID FOR USE IN RAPID PROTOTYPING
METHODS
[0001] The present invention relates to combinations of a
building material and a bath fluid for methods for directly
printing visual-aid models or elements, in particular, for the
use in the office or at home. The invention further relates to
polymers obtained from the reaction of the building material
and the bath fluid and to the elements and models produced
from the combinations according to the present invention.
The use of the combinations according to the present inven-
tion in rapid prototyping methods enables the production of
elements having varying mechanical properties. Coloured
elements can be obtained by adding colourants. The ele-
ments made of the building materials according to the
present invention exhibit mechanical properties, a thermo-
stability and accuracy in every detail, thereby rendering
them suitable as visual-aid models and discussion models
for design, architectural, constructional and other blueprints.
The surface quality, the rigidity and the hardness of the
elements can be improved by post-treatment.
[0002] Various methods for producing three-dimensional
objects having an arbitrary shape on the basis of data files
(e.g., CAD) such as as a discussion model, a visual-aid
model, a design model or a functional model are known
under the term “rapid prototyping”. The three-dimensional
objects are formed layer by layer in most of these methods.
[0003] The following methods are of particular impor-
tance:
[0004] Stereolithography (SLA) (photopolymers are
cured by irradiation with a suitable laser): Elements
are obtained with a high resolution and mechanical
properties, which are comparable to those of tech-
nical plastics. However, the costs of the method
(laser) and the sources of danger (toxic educts and
use of the laser) are detrimental.
[0005] Selective Laser Sintering (SLS) (metals, plas-
tics or ceramics; in the case of ceramics, a powder is
fused layer by layer by means of a laser): Using
particularly suitable materials, the elements achieve
approximately the same stability as elements of the
same material obtained by injection molding. How-
ever, the handling of the powder (typical particle
sizes from 20 to 50 gm) requires considerable efforts
in order to avoid contamination of the environment
with the powder.
[0006] 3-D-Printing (3DP) (a powder is formed into
three-dimensional objects using liquid binders). The
method is rapid, however, it leads to elements having
a moderate resolution and frequently unsatisfying
mechanical properties. However, these properties
can optionally be improved by a post-treatment step.
[0007] Fused Deposition Molding (FDM) (melts of
waxes or low melting thermoplasts are deposited in
strands or droplets to yield the desired molded
articles and, subsequently, they solidify). For
example, thermoplasts (such as polyamide or acry-
lonitrile-butadiene-styrene-copolymers) can be
employed. However, the resolution and the accuracy
in every detail, respectively, are inferior.
Sep. 29, 2005
[0008] A novel method requiring a relatively simple setup
and thus being also suitable for use in the office or at home
that does not require specific training of the users is
described in WO 01/26885, claiming priority of DE
19948591 A1. It is based on the use of a liquid building
material having a low viscosity that is deposited in a
computer-controlled way onto specific positions on a build-
ing support by means of a drop-on-demand technique (com-
parable to an ink jet), and that thereby solidifies in a physical
or chemical process. By depositing the building material
layer by layer, a three-dimensional object having arbitrary
shape is formed step by step. In this method, the building
support is positioned in a bath. The bath fluid serves to fill
the areas that are not filled by the building material and to
act as a supporting material in the formation of overhanging
structures.
[0009] Suitable materials are not described in WO
01/26885 in more detail. It is merely mentioned that ther-
moplastic or waxy materials having a viscosity of not more
than 20 mPa~s at a temperature of not more than 130° C. can
be employed, which cool down during deposition and, thus,
solidify. Furthermore, it is mentioned that the solidification
can also be caused by a chemical reaction by contacting an
ingredient of the bath fluid or by thermically initiated
crosslinking.
[0010] Building materials such as the waxes mentioned in
WO 01/26885 that solidify solely by cooling down from the
processing temperature (according to the method described
in WO 01/26885 130° C. at the most) to room temperature
and, nevertheless, have the very low viscosity required for
processing, exhibit an insufficient thermostability. Their
softening already occurs at temperatures slightly above
room temperature. As a result, they cannot serve as models
to be touched. Furthermore, functional models cannot be
produced using these materials because their mechanical
properties are insufficient.
[0011] The description in WO 01/26885 does not disclose
the composition of suitable building materials fulfilling the
requirement of having a low viscosity at the processing
temperature, which can be solidified by a chemical reaction
or by thermal crosslinking and, subsequently, have a suffi-
cient thermostability and good mechanical properties.
[0012] The successful application of the method described
in WO 01/26885 poses very high demands on building
material, bath and the combination thereof. Running systems
of this kind are not known. The demands on such systems
are as follows: The solidification has to proceed in a suffi-
ciently rapid way in order to achieve a sufficient resolution
of the structures produced, because flowing of the building
material reduces the resolution due to a too slow curing.
However, the curing has to proceed at the same time slowly
enough in order to ensure an adhesion or a sticking of the
droplets among each other and between subsequent layers.
Moreover, it has to be ensured that the building material
does not solidify until it contacts the bath fluid and not
already in the outlet ports of the deposition device or in
storage containers. For the application in the office or at
home, when operated by untrained persons it is further
required that the components, in particular the bath fluid are
not toxic and the disposal of the bath fluid by way of the
regular canalisation is possible without further action. Thus,
for example the use of most of the known, technically
US 2005/0215744 A1
employed monomers and initiators for the formation of
polymers or for crosslinking, are practically excluded as
ingredients of the bath fluid. The demands on the mechanical
rigidity of the three-dimensional elements produced also
excludes materials that result in powdery crystalline prod-
ucts after solidification (e.g., solutions of low molecular or
polymeric substances, which precipitate on contact with the
bath fluid). In most cases waxy materials exhibit a too low
thermostability. It is possible to produce three-dimensional
molded elements according to the method described in WO
01/26885 using particular waxes. However, these elements
already soften due to the body temperature upon contact
with the hand.
[0013] Therefore, there is the problem in applying the
method described in WO 01/26885 for the production of
three-dimensional elements, that there are presently no
known suitable building materials and bath fluids, which
result in elements having a sufficiently high thermostability
and mechanical stability.
[0014] Also WO 01/78968 discloses the formation of solid
or semi-solid objects by applying droplets or strands layer
by layer onto a support positioned in a bath fluid. However,
the method described therein requires that the outlet port of
the dosing device is under the surface of the bath fluid. The
materials described therein (oligomers or polymers, which
are liquid at room temperature, melts of oligomers or
polymers, reactive oligomers or polymers, gels, pastes
among others) exhibit either too high a viscosity for dosing,
e.g., using an ordinary ink jet print head, or similar limita-
tions as those for WO 01/26885 apply. That is, also WO
01/78968 does not give any hints how to prevent that a
reactive material immediately hardens when being dosed
into the bath fluid and, thus, plugs the dosing device.
Particularly, in those cases, wherein a building material
essentially consisting of a liquid-monomer is used in com-
bination with an aqueous bath fluid, there is the problem that
it cannot be avoided that a liquid monomer arbitrarily flows
within the bath after dosing, when the method described in
WO 01/78968 is applied using a dosage device having a port
under the bath surface. Moreover, only very few monomers
can be processed using water as a bath liquid, because their
density has to be higher than 1 g/cm3 in order to avoid
floating of the liquid monomer. These problems can only be
solved, if the liquid monomer polymerises very rapidly,
resulting in the problem that it already polymerises in the
outlet port of the dosing device as well, thereby plugging it.
In this context, the use of retarding substances (claims 21 to
23 of WO 01/78968) described in WO 01/78968 is counter-
productive. Therefore, the materials described in WO
01/78968 cannot be used in the method described in WO
01/26885.
[0015] Therefore, it is the object underlying the present
invention to provide suitable low-viscosity building mate-
rials and bath compositions for the production of three-
dimensional models or elements by means of a method,
preferably by means of the method described in WO
01/26885, wherein the building material is deposited in a
computer-controlled way onto specific positions of a support
layer by layer in form of single droplets, where it is
chemically solidified in these positions in the presence of a
bath fluid, the outlet port of the dosing device being located
above the surface of the bath fluid in order to avoid plugging
of the outlet port.
Sep. 29, 2005
[0016] The building materials and the bath compositions
shall be cost-efficient and shall not contain any toxic com-
pounds. Moreover, their handling shall be easy in order to
enable their use in the office or at home by a user without a
specific training.
[0017] The cured building material, i.e., the three-dimen-
sional models obtained, shall have a good thermostability
and further favourable mechanical and other physical prop-
erties so that models which can be touched and functional
models can be obtained. Finally, the three-dimensional mod-
els obtained shall exhibit a good accuracy in every detail. In
certain embodiments the elements shall also be suitable as
scaffolds in tissue engineering.
[0018] In principle, this object can be solved by using a
combination of a building material and a bath fluid, the
building material (“ink”) containing low-viscosity, low-
molecular compounds capable of rapidly forming polymers
having sufficient mechanical properties, when contacted
with the bath fluid. This can be carried out either by
polymerizing one or more monomers contained in the build-
ing material upon contact with the bath fluid or by forming
a branched or crosslinked polymer by reacting one or more
low-viscosity multifunctional compounds contained in the
building material with oligomeric or polymeric compounds
contained in the bath fluid.
[0019] Thereby, the deposition of the building material
(“ink”) is carried out by means of a suitable dosing device,
such as an ink jet print head, droplet by droplet into the bath
fluid, that is, in layers corresponding to subsequent cross
sections of the desired element. Thereby, the first layer is
deposited onto a building platform or another suitable sup-
port. Then each of the following layers can be applied onto
the preceding layer or onto the bath surface depending on the
shape of the desired element. Athree-dimensional element is
obtained by the sequence of an adequate number of layers.
[0020] The droplets are produced by a dosing system
capable of producing single droplets or flows of droplets
having a diameter in the range of 20 to 200 gm, preferably
50 to 90 gm and depositing these droplets at a predetermined
position, for example, according to the principle of an ink jet
print head. The building material must preferably have a
viscosity of less than 200 mPa~s, particularly preferred less
than 30 mPa~s in the processing state and further a suitable
surface tension compared to the bath fluid for an accurate
dosing. Furthermore, the building material must polymerise
rapidly after deposition. Thereby, a good connection of the
droplets among each other and to the building material of the
preceding layer has to be achieved. At the same time it has
to be ensured that the building material does not prematurely
solidify in the storage container, in the dosing device, in the
respective connections, in the die nor in another outlet port.
[0021] In the case of monomer-based building materials,
this can be achieved for example by incorporating into the
bath fluid an initiator or a catalyst initiating the polymeri-
sation of the monomers or the monomer mixture in the
droplet of the building material. Alternatively, the building
material itself can contain an initiator or a catalyst and,
additionally, an inhibitor or a stabilizer, the inhibitor or the
stabilizer being selected such that it can be deactivated by a
compound contained in the bath. Furthermore, the initiator
or catalyst system can also consist of several components,
one or more of which are contained in the bath and the others
US 2005/0215744 A1
are contained in the building material. In this case, the
polymerisation is initiated upon contact between the build-
ing material and the bath at the time when all components
get into contact. Moreover, for building materials on the
basis of crosslinking agents a defined start of the reaction
can be ensured by selecting the multifunctional compounds
in the building material such that these compounds are able
to react only with multifunctional oligomers or polymers
contained in the bath, and not with each other.
[0022] The terms “initiator”, “catalyst”, “stabilizer” and
“inhibitor” are used herein according to the definitions used
in the literature in the field of polymer chemistry.
[0023] According to the present invention a combination
of at least one building material and a bath fluid for a method
for directly printing elements and models is provided, char-
acterized in that
[0024] A) the building material contains at least one
low-viscosity monomeric or oligomeric compound
having a viscosity