Harnesses light + oxygen to grow commercial quality parts at game-changing speeds
Partners with Sequoia and Silver Lake Kraftwerk and raises $41 million
VANCOUVER, British Columbia — (BUSINESS WIRE) — March 16, 2015 — Carbon3D today emerged from stealth on the main stage of the TED conference with an innovative approach to polymer-based 3D printing that promises to advance the industry beyond basic prototyping to 3D manufacturing. The new Continuous Liquid Interface Production technology (CLIP) harnesses light and oxygen to continuously grow objects from a pool of resin instead of printing them layer-by-layer. The technology was simultaneously introduced to the scientific community as the cover story in the journal Science. Carbon3D’s CLIP technology raises the state-of-the-art in 3D printing in three ways:
- GAME-CHANGING SPEED: 25-100 times faster than conventional 3D printing
- COMMERCIAL QUALITY: produces objects with consistent mechanical properties
- MATERIAL CHOICE: enables a broad range of polymeric materials
“Current 3D printing technology has failed to deliver on its promise to revolutionize manufacturing,” said Dr. Joseph DeSimone, CEO and Co-Founder, Carbon3D. “Our CLIP technology offers the game-changing speed, consistent mechanical properties and choice of materials required for complex commercial quality parts.”
How CLIP Works
Existing 3D printing, or additive manufacturing, technology is really just 2D printing, over and over again. As a result, 3D printed parts take many hours, even days, to produce and are mechanically weak due to their shale-like layers. Using a tunable photochemical process instead of the traditional mechanical approach, Carbon3D’s layerless continuous liquid interface production technology (CLIP) eliminates these shortcomings to rapidly transform 3D models into physical objects. By carefully balancing the interaction of UV light, which triggers photo polymerization, and oxygen, which inhibits the reaction, CLIP continuously grows objects from a pool of resin at speeds 25-100 times faster than traditional 3D printing.
At the heart of the CLIP process is a special window that is transparent to light and permeable to oxygen, much like a contact lens. By controlling the oxygen flux through the window, CLIP creates a “dead zone” in the resin pool just tens of microns thick (about 2-3 diameters of a red blood cell) where photopolymerization cannot occur. As a series of cross-sectional images of a 3D model is played like a movie into the resin pool from underneath, the physical object emerges continuously from just above the dead zone. Conventionally made 3D printed parts are notorious for having mechanical properties that vary depending on the direction the parts were printed because of the layer-by-layer approach. Much more like injection-molded parts, CLIP produces consistent and predictable mechanical properties, smooth on the outside and solid on the inside.
Venture Backing
Carbon3D also announced it had partnered with Sequoia Capital to lead the company’s Series A round of financing in 2013 along with Northgate Partners, Piedmont Capital Partners and Wakefield Group. Silver Lake Kraftwerk led the Series B round of financing in 2014 with Northgate Capital and Sequoia Capital, for a total raise of $41 million to commercialize the technology.
“If 3D printing hopes to break out of the prototyping niche it has been trapped in for decades, we need to find a disruptive technology that attacks the problem from a fresh perspective and addresses 3D printing’s fundamental weaknesses,” said Jim Goetz, Carbon3D board member and Sequoia partner. “When we met Joe and saw what his team had invented, it was immediately clear to us that 3D printing would never be the same.”
“We had studied the additive manufacturing ecosystem comprehensively and had concluded that the promise far exceeded the current reality in the marketplace,” said Adam Grosser, Carbon3D board member and Managing Director at Silver Lake Kraftwerk. “When we witnessed the CLIP process, we believed we had found a company that had invented a solution to speed, quality, and material selection. We are proud to work alongside Carbon3D to create a new category of 3D manufacturing.”
To learn more visit:
http://carbon3d.com
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About Carbon3D
Carbon3D, a Silicon Valley based company, was founded in 2013 in Chapel
Hill, NC. Working at the intersection of hardware, software and
molecular science, Carbon3D is delivering on the promise of 3D printing,
allowing commercial customers to go beyond prototyping to achieve 3D
manufacturing. The Continuous Liquid Interface Production technology
(CLIP) was originally developed by Professor Joseph DeSimone, Professor
Edward Samulski, and Dr. Alex Ermoshkin and introduced simultaneously at
TED 2015 and to the scientific community (Science, 2015). Since
its inception, Carbon3D has partnered with Sequoia Capital to lead the
company’s Series A round of financing in 2013 along with Northgate
Partners, Piedmont Capital Partners and Wakefield Group. Silver Lake
Kraftwerk led the Series B round of financing in 2014 with Northgate
Capital and Sequoia Capital, for a total raise of $41 million to date.