Morning Overview on MSN
'Necroprinting' uses mosquito tubes to 3D-print below cell scale
Engineers have turned one of nature’s most reviled body parts into a precision tool, using the hollow feeding tubes of dead ...
3D printing technology has the potential to revolutionize the field of biomedicine by providing new ways to meticulously fabricate complex structures like functional human tissues and organs as well ...
Scientists have found a way to use sunflower pollen to develop a 3D printing ink material that could be used to fabricate parts useful for tissue engineering, toxicity testing and drug delivery.
Professors Guillermo Ameer and Cheng Sun contributed to work that points to a new approach for heart bypass grafts.
3D printing is used to create real-life 3D objects from a digital model, facilitating the realization of ideas and concepts with high accuracy. Various 3D printing technologies exist, including ...
McGill researchers are exploring a new technique that uses 3D printing and hydrogels. It has the potential not only to improve biomedical implants but could also be useful in the development of ...
Note: Articles may be assigned to more than one subject area, as a result the sum of the subject research outputs may not equal the overall research outputs. Note: Hover over the donut graph to view ...
Interesting Engineering on MSN
US student reinvents 300-year-old cello with 3D printing, lands deal on Shark Tank
On Tuesday night (Dec. 16), before the crowd in Atlanta’s State Farm Arena, Thugger interrupted the lineup of performances to ...
Scientists at Nanyang Technological University, Singapore (NTU Singapore) have found a way to use sunflower pollen to develop a 3D printing ink material that could be used to fabricate parts useful ...
Interesting Engineering on MSN
New ‘necroprinting’ uses mosquito feeding tubes for 3D printing below cell scale
A new manufacturing technique called "3D necroprinting" repurposes mosquito proboscises as biodegradable nozzles for 3D ...
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