Abstract

AbstractAdditive manufacturing of glass aims to change the paradigm of glass manufacturing by allowing for improved customization coupled with lower energy and post‐processing needs. Fabrication of glass via volumetric additive manufacturing (VAM) involves printing in a silica‐loaded photopolymer resin with subsequent thermal processing and adds additional advantages by allowing for rapid printing of parts with smooth surfaces and no supports. Previous work in glass VAM has demonstrated fabrication of optical quality microoptics with overall dimensions on the scale of tens of cubic millimeters. For applications requiring glass printed on the scale of cubic centimeters the rheology, scattering, and green part strength must be controlled via resin formulation. Here, we present insight into a novel glass photopolymer resin suitable for VAM and in the effect of tuning formulation on the ability to produce dense glass parts with volumes on the scale of cubic centimeters.

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