In an interview with K-MAG, Lars Schmohl and Frederik Gutbrod talk about the newly developed water-soluble and fully biodegradable support material, the process of their research and what a dishwasher has to do with it all.
You have developed a support material for 3D printing. What inspired you to do this and what is special about it?
Lars Schmohl and Frederik Gutbrod: Additive manufacturing enjoys great popularity in industry and home applications due to its almost infinite freedom in design possibilities and simple production of components. In the strand delivery process, also known as fused filament fabrication (FFF), support structures are required when printing complex structures (undercuts and overhangs, etc.) so that subsequent material layers are secured against sagging.
Since these support structures have to be removed again after printing, the use of soluble materials has now become established for this purpose. By dissolving them with an appropriate solvent, e.g. water, after printing, a high-quality surface finish of the 3D component can be achieved. Of course, the material of the component does not correspond to the material of the support structures. However, these support structures dissolved in water then often end up as individual dissolved polymer chains in the waste water and thus inevitably in the environment. Therefore, our goal was to develop a plastic that is both water-soluble and completely biodegradable in water.