Perhaps this is a controversial viewpoint, but I am now thinking that recycling of 3D print waste is a lost cause.
"...cheaper, lighter, and more resistant." Resistant to...? The caption in the 3rd picture clarifies this as "resistant to degradation," but that lead in seemed a bit ...
Dr. Kelley Donaghy and Dan Fougnier, graduate student, received a grant of $9,300 from the Society of Plastic Engineers to launch a 3D printer filament recycling and production pilot plant. The funds ...
Centuries-old practices could make all of us better stewards of Earth, even as we cling to modern habits like buying a to-go coffee in a disposable cup. San Francisco- and Berlin-based 3D-printing ...
A startup called Vitriform3D has developed an innovative 3D printing process that makes use of the abundance of post-consumer ...
Glass bottles tossed in the trash are finding new life thanks to a collaboration between the Department of Energy’s Oak Ridge ...
Glass waste transformed: Vitriform3D’s binder jet process turns crushed post-consumer glass into countertops, tiles, and décor, bypassing traditional energy-intensive recycling. Nanofabrication ...
UMaine researchers aim to recycle wind turbine blades as 3D printing material A team of University of Maine researchers have secured a $75,000 grant to explore recycling wind blades as feedstock for ...