Image Courtesy of ESA/Foster + Partners

The European-designed lunar shelter is printed with rubble and binding agent.

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Concrete printing in 3D has a future in the near term, with commercial applications coming in a couple of years, predict researchers in the U.K.

Richard Buswell, senior lecturer in building-services engineering at Loughborough University, spent four years on a team developing a computer-controlled process for producing complicated concrete elements not possible by traditional means. The $2-million project, completed in 2011, produced a series of 1-meter-sq, curved panels with internal voids, made with high-strength mortar extruded and placed with a three-axis frame.

Buswell's team now aims to increase production by mounting the printer head on a seven-axis robotic arm. They are seeking a commercial industrial partner, he says.

Co-researcher and architectural firm Foster + Partners, London, has studied 3D printing for a decade, says associate director Xavier de Kestelier. He represented Foster on a European Space Agency project, completed last year, designing a shelter for lunar travellers. It comprises a load-bearing dome of impact-resistant cellular concrete.

The ESA team printed a 3,300-lb test block of figured concrete using "D-Shape" technology, owned by Dinitech S.p.A., Pisa, Italy.

In lunar use, printers would place layers of regoliththe dust and broken rock on the moon's surfaceon an inflatable formwork while injecting it with a liquid binder of undisclosed composition. De Kestelier now wants to bring the technology "back to Earth." Like Buswell, he also believes 3D concrete printing will soon find commercial uses.

Original post:
Researchers Predict Commercialized Wet-Mix Concrete Printing Within Two Years

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October 22, 2014 at 6:47 pm by Mr HomeBuilder
Category: Commercial Architectural Services