Bridging the Gap: Automated Steady Scaffoldings for 3D Printing

Jérémie Dumas, Jean Hergel and Sylvain Lefebvre
INRIA, Université de Lorraine

 

Model: Poppy Project from our colleagues at Inria Bordeaux

Abstract

Fused Filament Fabrication (FFF) is the process of 3D printing objects from melted plastic filament. The hot plastic exits a nozzle and fuses with the part just below, adding a layer of material to the object being formed. However, filament can only be deposited on top of an existing surface. Therefore, overhangs require a disposable support structure to be printed, temporarily supporting the threads of plastic that would otherwise hang in empty space.

Existing techniques for support generation fall into two categories: The first allow for very reliable prints by enclosing the bottom of the object in a dense structure, at the expense of increased material usage and build times. The second generate thin hierarchical structures connecting to the surface in a sparse number of points. This uses less material, at the expense of reliability: the part might become unstable, the structure itself may become difficult to print, the bottom surface quality degrades. The user therefore has to correct the structure and its parameters for each new object.

We propose to exploit the ability of FFF printers to print bridges across gaps. Since bridges are always supported by pillars at their extremities, they are both stronger and more stable than hierarchical tree structures. Our technique first selects the points to support based on overhang and part stability during the entire print process. It then optimizes for a printable scaffolding composed of bridges and vertical pillars, supporting all points. The result is an automated support generation technique using little material while ensuring fine surface quality and stability during the printing process.

Download

Paper

Slides

The .pptx I used for my SIGGRAPH presentation. The file is huge (220 MB). Sorry, but I’m not a PowerPoint power-user, and the stuff contains video. If you hear about any cool presentation software with good cross-plaftorm video support, I’d be interested to hear about it!

Software

We released recently (2nd of August) a new version of our modeling and slicing software called IceSL. You can find more info on the project’s website: http://shapeforge.loria.fr/icesl/. The available version is currently Windows only, and doesn’t yet include our support structures. We are working on it, so please bear with us while we work out all the little details.

Data

Most the models we used are taken from Thingivers. References are in the paper, but here is a list for your convenience:

The other objects were modeled directly in Lua for use in our slicer IceSL.

Citation

@article{Dumas:2014:BGA,
	author = {Dumas, J{\'e}r{\'e}mie and Hergel, Jean and Lefebvre, Sylvain},
	title = {Bridging the Gap: Automated Steady Scaffoldings for 3D Printing},
	journal = {ACM Trans. Graph.},
	issue_date = {July 2014},
	volume = {33},
	number = {4},
	month = jul,
	year = {2014},
	issn = {0730-0301},
	pages = {98:1--98:10},
	articleno = {98},
	numpages = {10},
	url = {http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/2601097.2601153},
	doi = {10.1145/2601097.2601153},
	acmid = {2601153},
	publisher = {ACM},
	address = {New York, NY, USA},
	keywords = {3D printing, FDM, FFF, scaffoldings, supports},
}

Acknowledgments

This work was partially supported by ERC grant ShapeForge (StG-2012-307877) and the Lorraine region.