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• Nov 13, 2018

Q&A with Aerosint

This week the additive manufacturing  industry gathers in Frankfurt, Germany for the annual Formnext tradeshow. In addition to the large and established enterprises are the  winners of the 2018 Formnext startup challenge. 3D Printing Industry caught up with these companies to find out more.

3D Printing Industry: When was your company founded and where are operations based?

Edouard Moens de Hase, CEO of Aerosint: The research started in January 2015 as part of the Belgian startup studio Make.it. Aerosint was founded in September 2016 and operations are based in Liège,  Belgium. Today Aerosint employs 7 engineers (2 phd’s) with complementary  skills.

3D Printing Industry: What does your company do?

Matthias Hick, CTO of Aerosint: We  have developed an alternative recoater for powder bed fusion printing  processes. Traditional recoaters like blades (hard and soft) or rollers  can only spread single material layers. Our recoater can create  multi-material powder layers. The Aerosint recoater relies on the high  definition deposition of powder voxels. A bit like a 2D printer is  depositing precisely ink droplets, our recoater does the same but with  dry powder voxels. Our recoater works with polymers, metals and  ceramics. The applications for such a recoater are therefore pletorious.

A  multi-material recoater like this, combined with the right  multi-material sintering strategy, makes multi-material powder fusion 3D  printing at reach. At Aerosint we strongly believe that multimaterial  additive manufacturing is the logical evolution of a technology that has  been around, with very little innovation, for over 30 years.

It’s time to make powder bed fusion multimaterial!

3D Printing Industry: How does your company fit into the additive manufacturing ecosystem?

Edouard Moens de Hase, CEO of Aerosint: We are focussing on the recoating technology and the multi-material  applications. We position ourselves as the experts of multimaterial  additive manufacturing. Today we can integrate our recoater in existing  SLS / SLM systems of companies having an interest in multimaterial  applications and looking for the supporting technology to do R&D.

3D Printing Industry: What are you hoping to gain from exhibiting at formnext 2018?

Edouard Moens de Hase, CEO of Aerosint:  We want to gain visibility on our technology and establish  partnerships with machine manufacturers and industrial end-users with  interesting multimaterial applications.

We basically want everybody to know Aerosint exists and can support multimaterial developments.

3D Printing Industry: How would you describe the roadmap for your enterprise over the coming years?

Matthias Hick, CTO of Aerosint: Today  we integrate our recoater in existing SLS / SLM printers for value  demonstration. We do this for industrial end-users, R&D centers or  Universities having a strong desire to develop multimaterial  applications.

As the  technology further develops we will address even more opportunities in  the multimaterial landscape but also in other industries.

3D Printing Industry: Is there anything else you would like our readers to know about?

Edouard Moens de Hase, CEO of Aerosint:  With the Aerosint recoater, multimaterial is not wishful thinking  anymore. Multimaterial will allow parts optimization and  functionalization like no other manufacturing technology is capable of.  Just think about the potential of integrating conductivity in parts or  printing material gradients combining a rigid with a soft material or  being able to locally reinforce a part. Those are just a few examples of  what a multimaterial technology like ours could achieve.

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Source: 3dprintingindustry