Filter By “Additive Manufacturing of Electronics”

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Process Capabilities and Application of Modern SMT Glue

Discover the possibilities that modern SMT gluing provides, and get a better understanding of the glue process in electronic manufacturing.

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Inside The Blueprint with Nano Dimension

A production crew spent a day at Nano Dimension’s U.S. headquarters in July to garner insight on the company’s quest to reinvent manufacturing ...

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What is AME and why is it important?

AME is the innovative technology that is paving the way for Industry 4.0 production techniques. AME adds another dimension ...

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Design Your First Additively Manufactured Electronics (AME)

Academic science, defense, and R&D labs, however, are exploring more unusual forms of conductive metal and polymer structures to test experiments and uncover new phenomena. Our latest research study features not conventional electronic components but rather an array of small metal structures that would be difficult, if not impossible, to fabricate any other way.

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Use Case: Additively Manufactured Environmental Sensors

IoT sensors help provide full interconnectivity between a wide range of objects. Learn more about how the DragonFly Pro 3D printer was used to create this temperature and humidity sensor that can be incorporated into many applications.

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Use Case: Additively Manufactured Molded Interconnect Devices

Molded Interconnect Devices (MIDs) provides a high degree of design flexibility and miniaturization. With the DragonFly Pro 3D printer’s ability to print both dielectric and conductive inks concurrently, not only is production time kept low, but conductive traces can now be printed within the insulating materials.

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Use Case: Agile AME production reduces production time by 97% and costs by 85%

Everyone makes mistakes, but that doesn't mean manufacturers need to incur huge time and cost penalties correcting them. Learn how one company managed to redesign and 3D print 30 Ball Grid Array PCBs on the DragonFly™ Pro system in just one day upon unearthing a design error.

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Use Case: Additively Manufactured Touch Sensors

In an IoT world, we interact with our gadgets, tools, environment and vehicles in new ways such as touch, eye tracking or speech. As product formats change and features evolve, there is the need to develop new sensors to facilitate this ‘electronics everywhere’ era where monitoring and effortless control become paramount.

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Use Case: L3Harris 3D Prints RF Amplifiers

Harris Corporation and Nano Dimension worked together to explore the potential use of 3D printing for radio frequency (RF) circuits. The resulting data showed similar RF performance between 3D printed and the baseline amplifiers, demonstrating the viability of 3D printing technology to produce a functional RF circuit.