1997 / Solid Freeform Fabrication Proceedings
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Author John W. Priest (a), Charles Smith (a,b), Patrick DuBois (c), The University of Texas at Arlington (a), Electrical Engineering (b), Automation and Robotics Research Institute (c)
Source Solid Freeform Fabrication Proceedings, 1997, p1-10
Abstract Liquid Metal Jetting (LMJ) is solid freeform fabrication process for producing metal mechanical parts and electronic interconnects. It is a technology similar to ink jet printing where individual molten droplets are accurately printed. LMJ will produce metal parts on demand from a CAD database with functional performance parameters similar to metal parts produced by machining or casting. By controlling solidification rates and metal alloy composition, LMJ is able to produce parts with unique properties such as metal matrices and functionally graded materials. This paper will review the current status of LMJ and future applications for this technology. (Auth abstract) [References: 38]
Solid Freeform Fabrication Proceedings can be obtained from:  The Solid Freeform Fabrication Symposium
or contact:
The University of Texas at Austin
Laboratory for Freeform Fabrication / Texas Materials Institute
Mechanical Engineering Dept.
c/o The Solid Freeform Fabrication Symposium
MC C2200
Austin, TX 78712-1063 USA
512-471-3026; 512-471-7681 FX; Email: sffsymp@uts.cc.utexas.edu