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Mesoscale laser 3D printing

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posted on 2024-07-11, 12:57 authored by Linas Jonušauskas, Darius Gailevičius, Sima Rekštyte, Tommaso Baldacchini, Saulius JuodkazisSaulius Juodkazis, Mangirdas Malinauskas
3D meso scale structures that can reach up to centimeters in overall size but retain micro- or nano-features, proved to be promising in various science fields ranging from micro-mechanical metamaterials to photonics and bio-medical scaffolds. In this work, we present synchronization of the linear and galvanometric scanners for efficient femtosecond 3D optical printing of objects at the meso-scale (from sub-μm to sub-cm spanning five orders of magnitude). In such configuration, the linear stages provide stitch-free structuring at nearly limitless (up to tens-of-cm) working area, while galvo-scanners allow achieving translation velocities in the range of mm/s-cm/s without sacrificing nano-scale positioning accuracy and preserving the undistorted shape of the final print. The principle behind this approach is demonstrated, proving its inherent advantages in comparison to separate use of only linear stages or scanners. The printing rate is calculated in terms of voxels/s, showcasing the capability to maintain an optimal feature size while increasing throughput. Full capabilities of this approach are demonstrated by fabricating structures that reach millimeters in size but still retain sub-μm features: Scaffolds for cell growth, microlenses, and photonic crystals. All this is combined into a benchmark structure: A meso-butterfly. Provided results show that synchronization of two scan modes is crucial for the end goal of industrial-scale implementation of this technology and makes the laser printing well aligned with similar approaches in nanofabrication by electron and ion beams.

Funding

ARC | DP190103284

Photonic crystals: the key to breaking the Si-solar cell efficiency barrier : Australian Research Council (ARC) | DP190103284

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ISSN

1094-4087

Journal title

Optics Express

Volume

27

Issue

11

Pagination

15205-15221

Publisher

The Optical Society

Copyright statement

Copyright © 2019 Optical Society of America under the terms of the OSA Open Access Publishing Agreement.

Language

eng

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