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Additive Manufacturing Workshops

Upcoming Workshops

There are currently no upcoming workshops. Check back soon for more. 

Past Workshops

Additive Manufacturing Benchmark Test Series (AM Bench) 2022 logo
AM Bench 2022 logo.
Credit: NIST

AM Bench Conferences

Additive Manufacturing Benchmarks Conferences and Meetings

Additive Manufacturing Benchmarks (AM Bench) provide a continuing series of controlled benchmark measurements, in conjunction with a conference series, with the primary goal of enabling modelers to test their simulations against rigorous, highly controlled additive manufacturing benchmark test data. All AM Bench data are permanently archived for public use. The AM Bench conference series provides a venue for sharing the results of these tests and convening modelers and experimentalists to discuss successes and challenges. AM Bench held conferences in 2018 and 2022; future conferences are planned. 


A hand in a purple glove turns a metal dial on a plate holding tiny vials of purple liquid.
Researchers used a noninvasive and label-free method called optical coherence tomography to assess the live cells in the 3D scaffold system. OCT is an imaging technique that uses light waves to take cross sectional images of a sample.
Credit: R. Wilson/NIST

Biofabrication

Workshop on Measurement Needs for Biofabrication of Tissue Engineered Medical Products 

Biofabricated tissue-engineered constructs have the potential to transform personalized medicine. However, characterizing these constructs post-fabrication and throughout preclinical use remains challenging. The National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) held a 1-day workshop on measurement needs for biofabricated constructs that contain cells, focusing on metrology for the structure of the constructs, cell viability in the constructs, and functional capacity of the constructs. This workshop helped enable future research directions, standards development, and the adoption of these constructs for clinical use.


Two miniature tugboat replicas sit in front of a metal ruler.
3D printed "Benchy the Boat" made from vat photopolymerized polyelectrolyte complexes.
Credit: T. Kolibaba/NIST

Photopolymers

Photopolymer Additive Manufacturing (PAM) Workshop: Roadmapping a Future for Stereolithography, Inkjet, and Beyond 

The Photopolymer Additive Manufacturing (PAM) Workshop, held October 29-30, 2019 at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) campus in Boulder, Colorado, was organized to identify common problems and solutions specific to photopolymers, ultraviolet curing, manufacturing processes, and performance of materials in PAM commercial products. The workshop’s technical focus was on the design, synthesis, and production of PAM printed products, particularly with respect to setting standards and establishing measurement science needs.


Photopolymer Additive Manufacturing Alliance (PAMA) logo
Photopolymer Additive Manufacturing Alliance (PAMA) logo.
Credit: RadTech International

Photopolymer Additive Manufacturing Alliance (PAMA)

Photopolymer Additive Manufacturing Alliance (PAMA) 2023 Workshop - Building a Unified Vision from Research to Regulation

RadTech and the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) hosted the second in-person photopolymer additive manufacturing workshop in Boulder, CO from September 18-19, 2023. The event was designed to enable candid, pre-competitive conversation regarding the state of the field of vat photopolymerization through a series of panel discussions and develop updated, comprehensive roadmaps for current and future directions. Speakers from NIST included Lyle Levine, Russel Maier, Thomas Kolibaba, Callie Higgins, Jason Killgore, and Dianne Poster. 


Close up view of the periodic table, focusing on Gallium (Ga) and Germanium (Ge). A semiconductor lies on the periodic table, indicating that Ga and Ge are critical minerals for semiconductor production.
Critical minerals and materials, such as gallium (Ga) and germanium (Ge), pictured above, pose challenges to sustainable metals processing. 
Credit: Adobe Stock

AM Metals

Material Challenges in Developing a Sustainable Metal Processing Infrastructure

This workshop aimed to foster collaboration and innovation in critical areas such as the development and integration of novel processing methods and simulation tools to support sustainable metals processing. As a part of fostering these collaborations, this workshop hoped to identify critical materials challenges in the following topic areas: sustainable extractive metallurgy, innovative metal manufacturing technologies, and lifecycle assessment and recycling innovations. 


An additively manufactured ceramic Radio Frequency (RF) device. Close up view shows the 3D printed ceramic surface was printed in a gridded pattern.
Ceramic additive manufacturing can build complex structures, like this Radio Frequency (RF) device pictured above. Image from Materials Research & Measurement Needs for Ceramics Additive Manufacturing.
Credit: Courtesy Mark Mirotznik, University of Delaware, Newark, DE

Ceramics

Materials Research & Measurement Needs for Ceramics Additive Manufacturing

The National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) organized a workshop on materials research and measurement needs in ceramic additive manufacturing (AM). The meeting brought together leading experts from early industrial adopters of ceramics AM, AM-equipment and feedstock manufacturers, government agencies, and academia. The goals were to discuss the most promising broad-impact applications of ceramics AM and identify the associated materials measurement needs which could accelerate the incorporation of AM methods into commercially viable ceramic manufacturing technologies. The workshop critically reviewed opportunities and challenges for ceramics AM in key market sectors with discussions focused on bridging critical knowledge gaps that hinder the broader deployment of ceramics AM technologies.

Contacts

MML Additive Manufacturing Program Coordinator

Created July 25, 2024, Updated November 21, 2024