3DPrint.com | The Voice of 3D Printing / Additive Manufacturing

Plasmonics: Nanoscribe Photonic Professional GT 3D Printer Allows for Innovative Solutions

Are you still wrapping your mind around the world of nanotechnology—and wondering why exactly it is that those brilliant minds in research labs around the world aren’t content enough just to engineer things we ordinary people can see? The first part is manageable, but the last part you will need to get used to as scientists operating at the molecular scale are discovering ways to design far too many structures for valuable applications to give up now. And while we’re add it, Nanoscribe is throwing a new term at you with plasmonics. If you are a researcher, you may be well-familiarized with plasmonics, where light is harnessed using custom structures at the nanoscale, generally in metal.

The German manufacturer of 3D printers, as well as offering software and photoresists, is quite comfortable operating in their micro- and nano-worlds, and they cater to a client base busy innovating on that level. Recently offering their first user meeting in the US at Harvard, Nanoscribe is focused on being able to help others not only study nanotechnology, but to do so in high resolution.

As Nanoscribe points out, while plasmonics are often flat molecular surfaces because of electron beam lithography or direct laser writing, their Photonic Professional GT system is more than capable of creating the lithography, as well as fabricating 2.5D polymer nano-/micro-structures in metal.

“The bigger design freedom in this approach allows for interesting new properties and functionalities,” states the Nanoscribe team.

The examples of what can be made with plasmonics are quite impressive, as we get a look into production on the molecular scale, from creating a pyramid with a thin gold film, to an etch mask pattern.

An application note was released recently on the topic as well, where Nanoscribe outlines their 3D printer as that offering the ‘world’s highest resolution.’

“It offers resolution between what can be achieved with electron beam lithography and UV lithography, providing at the same time the full fabrication flexibility for 2D, 2.5D as well as for 3D objects,” states Nanoscribe.

Allowing that the printer can be used in both sterile and non-sterile environments, Nanoscribe developed this hardware for demand research that requires high performance. Maskless lithography can be used on both silicon wafers and glass.

Plasmonic behavior can be achieved through the following:

For those interested in micro-fabrication, it would seem that the Photonic Professional GT is a good place to start if you are heavily involved in research. Tiny parts can be created quickly due to a simple 3D micro printing workflow. According to Nanoscribe, this allows virtual 3D models to be converted into parts for a variety of applications such as:

Other highlights include:

The goal with this 3D printer was to set new standards for fabrication at this scale not just in 3D printing, but also in maskless lithography, coupling two modes of writing within one machine that offers precise piezo mode for arbitrary 3D trajectories (FBMS) and high-speed galvo mode (MBFS) for speed in the layering method. See Nanoscribe for further information on the Photonic Professional GT. Discuss further in the 3D Printing Plasmonics forum over at 3DPB.com.

Exit mobile version