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The Department of Energy is offering a collaboration opportunity to further develop and commercialize the Flow-based Volumetric Additive Manufacturing System created by Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory. This technology aims to enhance high-throughput 3D printing by enabling continuous resin flow, eliminating the need for manual container swaps. Interested companies should demonstrate their capability to commercialize this innovation.
The work involves collaboration to develop and commercialize a new additive manufacturing technology that allows for continuous resin flow in 3D printing.
This listing does not include downloadable attachments. The solicitation details may be in the description below.
Verify on SAM.govOpportunity: Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL), operated by the Lawrence Livermore National Security (LLNS), LLC under contract no. DE-AC52-07NA27344 (Contract
44) with the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE), is offering the opportunity to enter into a collaboration to further develop and commercialize its Flow-based Volumetric Additive Manufacturing System.
Background: Volumetric Additive Manufacturing (VAM) is an emerging technology in near-instant 3D printing where the part is formed in free space without imposed stress. Currently, containers that hold the resin must be replaced between prints. This is manual and time-consuming, which precludes the method to scaling for high throughput applications. Description: LLNL researchers have developed an approach to incorporate flow (either in stop-flow or continuous flow operation) to replace resin in the vial to enable high throughput production of 3D printed parts with VAM. Advantages/Benefits: • VAM is already one of the most competitive VAT photopolymerization methods for speed, this implement unlocks even faster rates - opens a path towards 100x mfg rate • Continuous printing - does not require manual operation to swap out resin containers after print is completed Potential Applications: • Fast, accurate, repeatable high-throughput production of 3D printed parts with arbitrary geometries Development Status: Current stage of technology development: TRL ☐ 0-2 ☒ 3-5 ☐ 5-9 LLNL has filed for patent protection on this invention. LLNL is seeking industry partners with a demonstrated ability to bring such inventions to the market. Moving critical technology beyond the Laboratory to the commercial world helps our licensees gain a competitive edge in the marketplace. All licensing activities are conducted under policies relating to the strict nondisclosure of company proprietary information. Please visit the IPO website at https://ipo.llnl.gov/resources for more information on working with LLNL and the industrial partnering and technology transfer process. Note: THIS IS NOT A PROCUREMENT. Companies interested in commercializing LLNL's Flow-based Volumetric Additive Manufacturing System should provide an electronic OR written statement of interest, which includes the following: 1. Company Name and address. 2. The name, address, and telephone number of a
point of contact. 3. A description of corporate expertise and/or facilities relevant to commercializing this technology. Please provide a complete electronic OR written statement to ensure consideration of your interest in LLNL's Flow-based Volumetric Additive Manufacturing System. The subject heading in an email response should include the /or the title of LLNL’s Technology/Business Opportunity and directed to the Primary and Secondary
Point of Contacts listed below. Written responses should be directed to: Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory Innovation and Partnerships .O. Box 808, L-779 Livermore, CA 94551-0808 Attention: 2025-313 Austin Smith Alternative
Point of Contact Charlotte Eng Contracting (No Street Address
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