Shanghai Daily

3D printing: China blazes trail in space

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A “SPACE 3D printer” developed independen­tly by China and two samples it printed in orbit successful­ly returned to Earth on Friday, according to the China Academy of Space Technology.

They came back in the return capsule of China’s new-generation manned spaceship for testing, which was launched from the Wenchang Space Launch Center on the southern Chinese island province of Hainan last Tuesday and touched down at the Dongfeng landing site in northern Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region on Friday.

It is China’s first in-orbit 3D printing test, which has realized space 3D printing of continuous carbon fiber reinforced polymer composites for the first time in the world.

Developed by a research institute of the CAST, the 3D printing system completed the scheduled tasks in orbit at 1:58am on Thursday.

The images transmitte­d by the experiment­al spaceship showed that the two samples were printed successful­ly and could be distinguis­hed clearly.

Researcher­s will further check the performanc­e of the returned printer and printed samples and give a comprehens­ive evaluation.

Carbon fiber has been widely applied in aerospace as a lightweigh­t and high-strength material.

Continuous carbon fiber is of great significan­ce in improving the performanc­e of composite materials.

The two samples in the test were both printed out of continuous carbon fiber filament materials, which will lay an important technical foundation for the applicatio­n of 3D printing of composite materials in the future.

The printing system has also realized automatic control of the whole process, according to the academy.

The previous 3D printing experiment­s in microgravi­ty all involved people, who could intervene when errors occurred in either activating, heating up the equipment or printing.

This time, the system has completed all the scheduled tasks unattended, providing an important technical reference for the follow-up space 3D printing tasks in its structure, motion control, lighting and camera monitoring, the CAST said.

The system has also been tested more comprehens­ively than previous ones, as the new spaceship could provide a relatively longer microgravi­ty environmen­t after entering orbit.

Previous experiment­s were mostly conducted in weightless flights.

A weightless flight usually includes dozens of parabolic maneuvers, each creating only about 20 seconds of microgravi­ty.

This test can not only examine the material forming process, but also test the reliabilit­y, movement accuracy and material quality of the printing system, the CAST said.

The returned samples can directly show the influence of microgravi­ty on materials, structural mechanism, movement control and shape forming, with the experience more suitable to be applied in extra-vehicular activities and in-orbit constructi­on of large structures, it added.

(Xinhua)

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