Researchers have developed a new printing technology that uses sound waves to control the size of liquid droplets independent of fluid viscosity. This approach could greatly broaden the types of liquids, including biopharmaceuticals, that can be printed drop-on-demand. The researchers used sound waves to generate a highly confined force at the tip of the printer nozzle, which pulls the droplet. The higher the amplitude of the sound waves, the smaller the droplet size.
from Top Technology News -- ScienceDaily https://ift.tt/2wxJONu
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Omicron has cast a shadow of uncertainty on growth outlook: IndiGo CEO
However, the airline is stronger now when compared to situation in 2020 during the first wave of the pandemic, says Ronojoy Dutta from Com...
-
While sales to original equipment manufacturers declined 16.3% year on year in FY20, the replacement market sales declined by a modest 2.6% ...
-
India's passenger vehicle sales are expected to grow between 3-5 percent in the current fiscal year, after expanding at the slowest pace...
-
The earnings momentum has been quite resilient and the policy momentum quite focused towards improving the infrastructure and attractiveness...
No comments:
Post a Comment