Materialise NV

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Materialise NV
Type Private
Industry 3D Printing
Founded 1990
Founder(s) Wilfried Vancraen
Headquarters Leuven, Belgium
Area served Worldwide
Employees 800-1000
Website http://www.materialise.com/

Materialise NV, headquartered in Leuven, Belgium, is active in the field of additive manufacturing, also known as 3D Printing.

History

Materialise was founded in June 1990 by Wilfried Vancraen as a spin-off of the KU Leuven, becoming the first Rapid Prototyping Service Bureau in the Benelux region.[1] What was then known as Rapid Prototyping is now known as Additive Manufacturing or 3D Printing, a three-dimensional printing technique that starts from a 3D CAD drawing and results in a three-dimensional object manufactured in a wide range of plastics, stainless steel, titanium, and a growing range of other materials.[2]

Software

Following its conception, Materialise concentrated on the research and development of solutions for the transfer of data to Additive Manufacturing machines. In 1991, the company released Mimics and in 1992, Magics. Mimics calculates surface 3D models from stacked image data such as Computed Tomography (CT), Confocal Microscopy, Micro CT, and Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) through image segmentation. Magics imports data from CAD formats and exports printable files in the STL format.

Mammoth stereolithography

Materialise's patented Mammoth Stereolithography

In order to build single-piece Stereolithography models with dimensions of more than 2 meters, Materialise developed Mammoth Stereolithography. The build area of the largest Mammoth machine is 2100x700x800mm.

Applications

The technology at Materialise is being used by professionals in the automotive,[3] aerospace, consumer electronics, consumables, orthopaedic, cardiovascular,[4] cranio-maxillofacial,[5] and dental industries, as well as in architecture, fashion, jewelry, art,[6] and more.

References

  1. Society of Manufacturing Engineers. "Wilfried Vancraen Accepts RTAM Industry Achievement Award". Retrieved 14 November 2011. 
  2. Materialise. "Low Volume Manufacturing Materials List". Retrieved 14 November 2011. 
  3. Barry, Keith (16 February 2011). "The Secret World of Printing Concept Cars in 3-D". Autopia (Wired). 
  4. Bongert, M. "Mimics Assists in Investigating Impact of Aortic Valve Prostheses on Blood Flow". 
  5. Synthes. "CMF Customized Surgical Solutions". 
  6. Swengley, Nicole (08/09/2011). "New dimension: 3D printing machines". The Telegraph. 

See also

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