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3D-printing of non-assembly, articulated models

Published:01 November 2012Publication History
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Abstract

Additive manufacturing (3D printing) is commonly used to produce physical models for a wide variety of applications, from archaeology to design. While static models are directly supported, it is desirable to also be able to print models with functional articulations, such as a hand with joints and knuckles, without the need for manual assembly of joint components. Apart from having to address limitations inherent to the printing process, this poses a particular challenge for articulated models that should be posable: to allow the model to hold a pose, joints need to exhibit internal friction to withstand gravity, without their parts fusing during 3D printing. This has not been possible with previous printable joint designs. In this paper, we propose a method for converting 3D models into printable, functional, non-assembly models with internal friction. To this end, we have designed an intuitive work-flow that takes an appropriately rigged 3D model, automatically fits novel 3D-printable and posable joints, and provides an interface for specifying rotational constraints. We show a number of results for different articulated models, demonstrating the effectiveness of our method.

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            • Published in

              cover image ACM Transactions on Graphics
              ACM Transactions on Graphics  Volume 31, Issue 6
              November 2012
              794 pages
              ISSN:0730-0301
              EISSN:1557-7368
              DOI:10.1145/2366145
              Issue’s Table of Contents

              Copyright © 2012 ACM

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              Publication History

              • Published: 1 November 2012
              Published in tog Volume 31, Issue 6

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