16-17-3274-vl Inkjet Printing for Digital Fabrication

Course offering details

Instructors: Prof. Dr. Edgar Dörsam

Event type: Lecture

Org-unit: Dept. 16 - Mechanical Engineering

Displayed in timetable as: Inkjet Print Dig Fab

Subject:

Crediting for:

Hours per week: 2

Language of instruction: Englisch

Min. | Max. participants: - | -

Digital Teaching:
This course is offered as digital teaching without face-to-face sessions due to low enrollment. Accompanying this, an online consultation hour is offered via Zoom, the dates of which are indicated in moodle.

The oral examinations are possible at any time after an appointment (see documents in moodle). The oral exams are therefore possible during the course time, in the lecture-free period or in the next semester. The course is therefore also suitable for exchange students.

Course Contents:
Digitization is everywhere, also in printing technology. The trend goes to digital printing technologies like inkjet printing. Imagine you could use your office inkjet printer at home (the one that uses ink cartridges, not laser) for 3D printing of a human organ for biomedical applications! What do you need to change on your office printer to be able to do so? What kinds of inkjet printheads, inks and substrates do you need to use? What else do you have to take care of (temperature control, drying of the ink, electrical control unit)? In other words: How do you apply inkjet printing for digital fabrication?

Within the lecture, all of these questions are addressed and discussed. Students are introduced to digital printing techniques and the different principles of inkjet printing (piezo, thermal, drop-on-demand etc.). They learn the theory and models behind inkjet printing: How does an inkjet printhead produce small droplets? What are typical properties of inkjet inks and how can you describe them? The design of typical inkjet printheads is explained. Another topic of the lecture are fluid-substrate interactions: What happens when a droplet hits the substrate e.g. paper? Will the droplet spread on the paper? What does the printed droplet look like when it has dried? With the learned theories, the students will be able to derive simple models for inkjet printing and drop formation. After the lecture, students will know the most important printing parameters and characteristic numbers (Weber number, Ohnesorg number etc.). Another aim of the lecture is to reflect different trends of digital fabrication and to present and discuss possible applications for inkjet printing like biomedical printing, 3D printing and printed electronics (solar cells, OLED-displays etc.).

Literature:
No additional literature is required.

Preconditions:
none

Expected Number of Participants:
5

Further Grading Information:
The exam is oral.

Official Course Description:
Inkjet Printing for Digital Fabrication

Sustainability Reference of the Course Contents:
Printing is a technology for metering materials and structuring surfaces. Printing is thus an additive manufacturing technology that can be used to change surfaces in a targeted manner. Unnecessary material consumption and subsequent subtractive manufacturing processes can thus be largely avoided. The appropriate use of printing technology can therefore make a valuable contribution to resource efficiency.

Online Offerings:
moodle

Literature
Registration periods
Phase Block Start End registration End cancellation Deadline for audit
Direkte Zulassung Vorlesungszeit 01.03.2024 00:00 31.08.2024 23:59 31.08.2024 23:59 31.08.2024 23:59
Appointments
Date From To Room Instructors
There are no appointments.
Class session overview
Instructors
Prof. Dr. Edgar Dörsam