News

A group of North Texas doctors and scientists printed part of a human femur—the longest and strongest bone in the body—that mimics the strength, flexibility and overall mechanics of a real ...
Scientists 3D-print human femur with real bone strength, offering low-cost solutions for surgery, research, and future bone regeneration.
How wrong we were, because these boffins have developed a way to 3D print a glass-like material using easy-to-source materials and commonly available equipment.
Three-dimensional (3D) printing is becoming an increasingly common technique to fabricate scaffolds and devices for tissue engineering applications. This is due to the potential of 3D printing to ...
Scientists at the University of Bristol have conducted the world’s first full-scale shake test on 3D-printed homes to assess earthquake resilience.