History of 3D Printing

3D Printing started as an extremely expensive, niche method of manufacturing that held few advantages over more traditional methods, and over the course of its lifetime became much more advanced.

The origins of 3D printing go all the way back to the 1980s. Dr. Hideo Kodama of the Nagoya Industrial Research Institute published research in 1981 on a technique very similar to what eventually would be called stereolithography (SLA).

However, it wasn’t until 1987 when a patent was first filed and the first SLA printer was created by Charles Hull, who is widely considered the true inventor of 3D printing.

Over the next two years, Selective Laser Sintering (SLS) and Fused Deposition Modeling (FDM) printers were first developed, heating up the competition in the 3D printing space. No other major developments came along until the 90s, when Binder Jetting technology and 3D printers capable of making wax molds used for injection molding were invented.

By the early 2000s, 3D printers had become capable of printing functional human organs, though these mostly existed more as prototypes and proofs of concept rather than organs worthy of transplanting. However, there were some successful transplants of 3D printed organs – most notably 10 patients received bladder transplants using bladders printed from their existing bladder tissue. Best of all, this method of organ transplant eliminates the risk of the body rejecting the transplanted organ since it’s made of the patient’s own tissue.

Download the paper to read more about the history of 3D Printing.

Fill out the information below to download the resource.

By downloading this content, I agree to receive the DE 24/7 Newswire, a twice weekly free email newsletter (you may choose to opt-out in the newsletter).

Latest News

Lenovo Delivers New ThinkSystem V4 Servers Powered by Intel Processors
Lenovo’s next-gen ThinkSystem V4 delivers scalable, protected, and AI-ready infrastructure to handle range of workloads, Lenovo reports.

Stratasys and Siemens Healthineers Co-Develop Custom 3D-Printed Phantoms
Anatomically accurate 3D-printed phantoms replace cadavers, enhancing CT imaging and AI algorithm training, companies report.

Dassault Systèmes and KUKA Partner
Dassault Systèmes joins KUKA’s mosaixx digital ecosystem to provide way to purchase and use its 3DEXPERIENCE platform, companies...

Materialise Offers EN 9100 Certification for AM Metal Parts Production
A sector-specific variant of ISO 9001, EN 9100 certifies that an organization has implemented a quality management system.

Backflip AI Model Turns Text Into Physical Reality
Repeat unicorn founders in hard tech joined by a team of AI researchers from MIT to build design tool for...

Creaform.OS and the Creaform Metrology Suite Released
Creaform offers a fully integrated 3D measurement operating system and application software.

All posts