Select Page

BASF Ultrafuse 316L – Metal filament for industrial 3D printing

BASF Ultrafuse 316L - Metal filament for industrial 3D printing

Written by David

July 24, 2019

[post-views]

With Ultrafuse 316L, BASF 3D Printing Solutions launches an innovative metal-polymer composite for Fused Filament Fabrication (FFF) into the market.

It enables the safe, simple, and cost-efficient production of fully metal parts for prototypes, metal tooling, and functional metal parts in the simplest 3D printing process. After the subsequent industry-standard debinding and sintering, the final 3D printed part is 316L stainless steel.

For more information see the IDTechEx report on 3D Printing of Metals 2019-2029 . FFF refers to a 3D printing process in which parts are built-up layer-by-layer from moldable material, originally limited to thermoplastics. Ultrafuse 316L, a metal filament with polymer content, uses the same process; first, a suitable 3D printer builds a part layer-by-layer, with the polymer content of the filament acting as a binder. The main polymer content (primary binder) from the so-called green part is removed in a catalytic debinding process. The result of […]

You May Also Like…

A Perfect Pair: 3D Printed Drones

A Perfect Pair: 3D Printed Drones

Drones bring great energy to the design and 3D printing realm, with engineers engaged in developing new technology...

Pin It on Pinterest

Share This

Share this post with your friends!

Shares