3D Printing On Food
Opportunities
There are many
opportunities for 3D printing on food industry, like low-cost tools for organic
farmers in the developing world, home manufacturing and food production
combined to create 3D printable mini-farm and supermarket chain experimenting
with food 3D printing pilot.
As an example, I would like to introduce a machine for you to help you have a better
understanding what is going on about 3D printing on food industry.
The “Foodini”
is an automated meal-assembly machine that creates homemade meals faster and
more efficiently than human hands- is the first product by Natural Machines, Kucsma’s company.
In reality, the Foodini isn’t a 3D printer,
per se. 3D printers generally run at one
speed and handle a single ingredient: plastic. The Foodini is programmed similarly, but offers multiple speeds and works
with numerous ingredients at the same time. The box-shaped contraption is
approximately 17 inches wide, 18 inches high and clocks in at 33 pounds.
This machine could
bring us a lot of fun and help us to solve some problem at the same time, for
example, improve the eating condition for senior citizens, as we all known, for
elderly people, most of them have the problems with chewing or swallowing food,
they are often eat foods in puree form, you can imagine how bad their food look
like. Those blobs of
puree that they get on a plate actually don’t look very appetizing and as a
result these people which already have problems eating don’t eat too much
because it doesn’t look very attractive, in the long term, they may become
weaker, and look increasingly frail. But by
using 3D printing food machine may help to improve this situation, like make
the food still softer, but hold their shape due to a gelling agent.
Business model
3D Printing For Commercial Products
People have raised doubt for the 3D printing technology by
calling it just a “GIMIMICK” since the technology has born. If this tech keeps
its speed of growth to the day, it is right now, one might be able to print
anything to a computer and the printer in the foreseeable globalized future.
Impact of Globalization
By the end of year 2014, the growth in global trade has
dropped significantly in the last two years. Moreover, with the rise of 3D
Printing, taking back manufacturing from countries such as China, Vietnam, and
Indonesia might not be too hard to accomplish after all.
But seeing this in a different way, globalization can help
take the small business which doing by individual talents to the world. The
small business man normally does not have that much money to find a factory to
meet the minimum order to manufacture.
Impact on Business Model
Originally developed to produce prototypes, 3D Printing builds
up actual objects using a computer-aided design and minimal human
assistance. This could allow manufacturers to bring production closer to
the end user at a lower cost, thus, shrinking the supply chain.
3D printing can help one company transfer to product
orientation, as the production time can narrow down significantly, the pressure
for the warehouse and the cost can reduce a lot.
Customized will replace the traditional way for the R&D
department.
3D Printing
in Cosmetic Industry
It is
universally acknowledged that beauty never fails to fascinate human
beings, no matter female or male. As the appearance of 3D printing technology,
which dramatically changes the way people used to live, bring a lot of
surprising transformations in our daily life. Since the beginning of 3D
printing, the application of the technology was limited to industrials.
However, 3D printing has been introduced to cosmetic
industry, which is supposed to be a market with incredible potential.
Opportunities presented by Globalization
1.
Huge demand of cosmetics productions
The awareness of caring about skin and beauty has become a hot topic
across boundaries. People are willing to spend huge
amount of money on their face, hair and
body.
2.
Eco-friendly
From the selection of the material to the
manufacturing of the cosmetics, there will be a
huge consumption of the energy and will bring pollution to the
environment.
3.
Products Diversity
With the rapid development of cosmetic
industry, people are not satisfied with the current products. They want to have
the lipstick and eye shadow with their dream colors.
4.
Low cost
The relative low cost of cosmetics always attract the consumers. The 3D printing allows
the cosmetics fan to use their unused eye shadows to produce a new color, which
is amazing to all the customers all over the world.
Business Model
The emergence of the 3D printer Mink
attracts the world’s attention, which leads the people to a new cosmetics era.
That is the best combination of 3D printing and digital technology allowing
people to produce foundations, lipsticks and nail polisher at home.
Till now, the 3D printer is limited to produce only a small range of cosmetics.
However, the researchers and inventors are thriving to develop the technology,
which allows a wider range of materials and enables the printer to produce more
products, including fake eyelashes and skin care products.
3D printing in Aerospace: An emerging Approach
The
aerospace industry moves from fast prototyping to additive manufacturing
3D printing is ideal for the
aerospace industry which is constantly
looking for ways to save money, reduce weight and increase innovation. Since 3D printing is additive, builds the
component layer by layer, less raw
material is used. With traditional manufacturing, subtractive, material is removed resulting in a lot of
wasted material. Since many
aerospace-grade materials are expensive
the cost savings of using additive manufacturing is significant. In addition
complex parts can be designed and fabricated that wouldn't be possible with traditional manufacturing. Often these complex designs
allow the part to be lighter than otherwise possible. Reduction in weight is important in aerospace
as less weight results in fuel savings.
Current
The aerospace industry is already
leading 3D printing growth. Boeing's 787
Dreamliner currently includes about thirty 3D printed non-critical parts. United Technologies jet engine division,
Pratt and Whitney, has 25 components in its latest engine that are 3D
printed. Some are simple brackets but others are more complicated components including some in the engine's air
pathway. Airbus has 3D printed
components on its A380 that are stronger and lighter than the same parts
produced by traditional methods.
Lockheed Martin uses 3D printed parts in satellite manufacturing
including a dozen 3D printed brackets on a spacecraft heading to Jupiter.
Future
Airbus is exploring the option of
using 3D printing to fabricate spare parts on demand. Since 3D printing doesn't require tooling it
can be used to produce replacement parts that are no longer being manufactured.
Development of 3D printers capable of producing large scale parts is also desired. Lockheed Martin is currently working with Oak
Ridge National Laboratory to scale up to 60-100 feet in size with the goal of
printing wings for unmanned aircraft. Since
3D printing involves heating of the material
the challenge is that the large materials with varying thicknesses warp when
cooling. For this reason advancement in materials is needed to
progress with large scale printing. The future of aerospace includes 3D
printing. Aerospace competitors have
already found 3D printing useful in reducing cost and increasing innovation.
Weight reductions can be realized with complex designs that traditional manufacturing can't achieve.
3D printing large scale parts will be the future of aerospace.