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"SLA I"
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Application of Stereolithography Based 3D Printing Technology in Investment Casting
2020
Advanced methods for manufacturing high quality parts should be used to ensure the production of competitive products for the world market. Investment casting (IC) is a process where a wax pattern is used as a sacrificial pattern to manufacture high precision casting of solid metal parts. Rapid casting is in turn, a technique that eases the IC process by combining additive manufacturing (AM) technologies with IC. The use of AM technologies to create patterns for new industrial products is a unique opportunity to develop cost-effective methods for producing investment casting parts in a timely manner. Particularly, stereolithography (SLA) based AM is of interest due to its high dimensional accuracy and the smooth surface quality of the printed parts. From the first appearance of commercially available SLA printers in the market, it took a few decades until desktop SLA printers became available to consumers at a reasonable price. Therefore, the aim of this review paper is to analyze the state-of-the-art and applicability of SLA based 3D printing technology in IC manufacturing, as SLA based AM technologies have been gaining enormous popularity in recent times. Other AM techniques in IC are also reviewed for comparison. Moreover, the SLA process parameters, material properties, and current issues are discussed.
Journal Article
A Review of Vat Photopolymerization Technology: Materials, Applications, Challenges, and Future Trends of 3D Printing
2021
Additive manufacturing (3D printing) has significantly changed the prototyping process in terms of technology, construction, materials, and their multiphysical properties. Among the most popular 3D printing techniques is vat photopolymerization, in which ultraviolet (UV) light is deployed to form chains between molecules of liquid light-curable resin, crosslink them, and as a result, solidify the resin. In this manuscript, three photopolymerization technologies, namely, stereolithography (SLA), digital light processing (DLP), and continuous digital light processing (CDLP), are reviewed. Additionally, the after-cured mechanical properties of light-curable resin materials are listed, along with a number of case studies showing their applications in practice. The manuscript aims at providing an overview and future trend of the photopolymerization technology to inspire the readers to engage in further research in this field, especially regarding developing new materials and mathematical models for microrods and bionic structures.
Journal Article
Emergent L2 Grammars in and for Social Interaction: Introduction to the Special Issue
by
PEKAREK DOEHLER, SIMONA
,
ESKILDSEN, SØREN W.
in
Conversation analysis
,
Epistemology
,
exemplar‐based learning
2022
Setting the stage for the central themes and the articles in this special issue, this introduction delineates the epistemological confluences, complementarities, and differences among conversation analysis (CA), on the one hand, and 2 strands of usage‐based linguistics, on the other—namely, usage‐based second‐language acquisition (SLA) and interactional linguistics. This implies depicting how an increased interest in actual usage within the field of linguistics, including usage‐based SLA, has converged with the basic assumptions in CA and interactional linguistics: (a) Language use is primordially and primarily situated in social interaction, and (b) language emerges out of social interaction. We scrutinize the grounds for combining the 3 frameworks for investigating second language development, illustrate such combination through the discussion of some of the rare existing studies that integrate these frameworks, and argue for the need to develop the methodological combinations further in order to move toward an ecologically more valid understanding of how language develops out of language use. On that basis, and additionally drawing on the individual contributions to the special issue, we then outline some implications for L2 education.
Journal Article
3D Printing Technologies in Personalized Medicine, Nanomedicines, and Biopharmaceuticals
by
Luciano, Francis C.
,
Anaya, Brayan J.
,
Ruiz, Helga K.
in
3D printing
,
Biopharmaceutics
,
fuse deposition modelling
2023
3D printing technologies enable medicine customization adapted to patients’ needs. There are several 3D printing techniques available, but majority of dosage forms and medical devices are printed using nozzle-based extrusion, laser-writing systems, and powder binder jetting. 3D printing has been demonstrated for a broad range of applications in development and targeting solid, semi-solid, and locally applied or implanted medicines. 3D-printed solid dosage forms allow the combination of one or more drugs within the same solid dosage form to improve patient compliance, facilitate deglutition, tailor the release profile, or fabricate new medicines for which no dosage form is available. Sustained-release 3D-printed implants, stents, and medical devices have been used mainly for joint replacement therapies, medical prostheses, and cardiovascular applications. Locally applied medicines, such as wound dressing, microneedles, and medicated contact lenses, have also been manufactured using 3D printing techniques. The challenge is to select the 3D printing technique most suitable for each application and the type of pharmaceutical ink that should be developed that possesses the required physicochemical and biological performance. The integration of biopharmaceuticals and nanotechnology-based drugs along with 3D printing (“nanoprinting”) brings printed personalized nanomedicines within the most innovative perspectives for the coming years. Continuous manufacturing through the use of 3D-printed microfluidic chips facilitates their translation into clinical practice.
Journal Article
3D Printing in Regenerative Medicine: Technologies and Resources Utilized
2022
Over the past ten years, the use of additive manufacturing techniques, also known as “3D printing”, has steadily increased in a variety of scientific fields. There are a number of inherent advantages to these fabrication methods over conventional manufacturing due to the way that they work, which is based on the layer-by-layer material-deposition principle. These benefits include the accurate attribution of complex, pre-designed shapes, as well as the use of a variety of innovative raw materials. Its main advantage is the ability to fabricate custom shapes with an interior lattice network connecting them and a porous surface that traditional manufacturing techniques cannot adequately attribute. Such structures are being used for direct implantation into the human body in the biomedical field in areas such as bio-printing, where this potential is being heavily utilized. The fabricated items must be made of biomaterials with the proper mechanical properties, as well as biomaterials that exhibit characteristics such as biocompatibility, bioresorbability, and biodegradability, in order to meet the strict requirements that such procedures impose. The most significant biomaterials used in these techniques are listed in this work, but their advantages and disadvantages are also discussed in relation to the aforementioned properties that are crucial to their use.
Journal Article
Species- and community-level patterns in fine root traits along a 120000-year soil chronosequence in temperate rain forest
2011
1.Below-ground plant functional traits regulate plant-soil interactions and may therefore strongly influence ecosystem responses to global change. Despite this, knowledge of how fine-root functional traits vary among plant species and along environmental gradients has lagged far behind our understanding of above-ground traits. 2.We measured species- and community-level root and leaf trait responses for 50 temperate rain forest species from 28 families of ferns, woody and herbaceous angiosperms and conifers, along a soil chronosequence in New Zealand that exhibits a strong gradient in soil nutrient availability. Relationships among species traits (both above- and below-ground) and their distribution along the chronosequence were tested using phylogenetic generalized least-squares regression to account for plant relatedness. 3.Distinctive root trait syndromes were observed; they were closely linked to species' distribution along the chronosequence. Species growing in the strongly P-limited late stages of the chronosequence had relatively high specific root length (SRL), thin root diameter, high root tissue density, high levels of root branching and low root nutrient concentrations compared to intermediate stages. Species on the youngest site also had high SRL, but had low root tissue density, thick root diameter and high root nutrient concentrations. 4.Species root and leaf nutrient concentrations were positively correlated, reflecting the strong underlying gradient in soil fertility. In contrast, the relationship between SRL and SLA was more complex; there was a weak positive correlation between SRL and SLA, but this conflicted with stronger patterns of increasing SRL and declining SLA with increasing site age. 5.Community-averaged trait values calculated using presence/absence data showed similar trends to the species-level patterns. In contrast, community averages calculated using species abundance-weighted data showed weaker relationships with site age, particularly for morphological traits. This suggests that much of the variation in morphological traits between sites was driven by shifts in the presence of subordinate or 'rare' species rather than by changes in the dominant species. 6.Synthesis. Our study demonstrates co-ordinated species- and community-level changes in root traits along a soil chronosequence. These results highlight the influence of soil nutrition on plant functional traits and contribute to our understanding of the drivers of community assembly in a changing environment.
Journal Article
Integrating Linguistic Frameworks to Bridge the Theory–Practice Gap in Medical English Within Military Education
2026
This study investigates the integration of three linguistic frameworks, Systemic Functional Linguistics (SFL), Second Language Acquisition (SLA), and Sociocultural Theory (SCT), into English for Medical Purposes (EMP) teaching in military medical institutions. It explored how lecturers understand and enact these frameworks and which strategies may bridge the theory–practice gap. Data included a survey of 30 lecturers, semi-structured interviews with 15, and analysis of key EMP resources. Awareness was moderate but uneven (SFL 73%, SLA 67%, SCT 60%), with only 60% reporting integration of all three. Corrective feedback, especially prompts and clarification requests, was common (~80%). Main barriers were rigid curricula (87%), limited contextualised materials (80%), and heavy student workload (~67%). Despite these constraints, lecturers expressed strong support for theory-informed approaches, requesting targeted training and adapted materials. Findings show integration is both necessary and feasible if institutions provide curricular flexibility, professional development, and contextualized resources.
Journal Article
Drought Stress Effects on Growth, ROS Markers, Compatible Solutes, Phenolics, Flavonoids, and Antioxidant Activity in Amaranthus tricolor
2018
Four selected
Amaranthus tricolor
cultivars were grown under four irrigation regimes (25, 50, 80, and 100% field capacity) to evaluate the mechanisms of growth and physiological and biochemical responses against drought stress in randomized complete block design with three replications. Drought stress led to decrease in total biomass, specific leaf area, relative water content (RWC), photosynthetic pigments (chlorophyll
a
, chlorophyll
b
, chlorophyll
ab
), and soluble protein and increase in MDA, H
2
O
2
, EL, proline, total carotenoid, ascorbic acid, polyphenols, flavonoids, and antioxidant activity. However, responses of these parameters were differential in respect to cultivars and the degree of drought stresses. No significant difference was observed in control and LDS for most of the traits. The cultivars VA14 and VA16 were identified as more tolerant to drought and could be used for further evaluations in future breeding programs and new cultivar release programs. Positively significant correlations among MDA, H
2
O
2
, compatible solutes, and non-enzymatic antioxidant (proline, TPC, TFC, and TAC) suggested that compatible solutes and non-enzymatic antioxidant played vital role in detoxifying of ROS in
A. tricolor
cultivar. The increased content of ascorbic acid indicated the crucial role of the ASC–GSH cycle for scavenging ROS in
A. tricolor
.
Journal Article
Effects of Curing on Photosensitive Resins in SLA Additive Manufacturing
by
Grimaldo Ruiz, Oliver
,
Pedullà, Perla
,
Rodriguez Reinoso, Mariana
in
3-D printers
,
3D printing
,
Additive manufacturing
2021
Different mechanical properties characterise the materials of 3D printed components, depending on the specific additive manufacturing (AM) process, its parameters, and the post-treatment adopted. Specifically, stereolithography (SLA) uses a photopolymerisation technique that creates solid components through selective solidification. In this study, 72 specimens were 3D printed using 12 commercial-grade methacrylate resins and tested under uniaxial tensile loads. The resin specimens were evaluated before and after curing. The recommended cure temperature and time were followed for all materials. The stress-strain curves measured during the testing campaign were evaluated in terms of maximum tensile strength, Young’s modulus, ductility, resilience, and toughness. The results reveal that the curing process increases the material stiffness and resistance to tensile loads. However, it was found that the curing process generally reduces the plasticity of the resins, causing a more or less marked brittle behaviour. This represents a potential limitation to the use of SLA 3D printing for structural elements which require some plasticity to avoid dangerous sudden failures.
Journal Article