Scientists have successfully 3D printed a cheesecake – and suggest that it might be the future. Researchers created the cheesecake using edible food inks, such as peanut butter, Nutella and ...
Whilst scientists recently made a robot that can 3D print real cakes, it might be a few years before they become ...
Using a 3D printer and a bioink, scientists create an "engineered plant living material" (EPLM) that harnesses the power of ...
3D food printing could also transform industrial-scale food manufacturing, according to Dr Vincenzo Di Bari, assistant professor in food structure and processing at Nottingham University. Instead ...
New study uses 3D printing and genetically modified plant cells to create complex, self-repairing materials that could ...
A technology enabling the fabrication of intricate three-dimensional (3D) quantum dot (QD)-based structures at room ...
One of the problems encountered thus far with 3D-printing circuits with conductive filament is that it doesn’t really bond to anything, let alone solder, so how does one use it? [mikey77] wrote ...
3D printed materials have come a long way in the last decade or so as printers have become more and more mainstream. Printers can use all kinds of different plastics with varying physical ...
Scientists are harnessing cells to make new types of materials that can grow, repair themselves and even respond to their ...