I would second this. Biocompatible materials are still mostly relegated to high end industrial machines, but the Formlabs Dental SG resin is probably the most accessible and available bio compatible material for consumer printing. If you contact a Hub with a Form2 printer, they might be willing to special order that resin for you (if they do not already have it), but it is pretty expensive stuff comparably. Best of luck!
It is a resin I only stock for special orders because of that price tag. But from what I’ve seen of it, it prints beautifully and works exactly as it is designed to.
Did I say “only used by”?! I said “commonly used by” big difference… besides when you see hospitals and even vets using 3d printing is usually done in titanium… so when I read the original post I thought it might be some 3d printed Piercing type jewellery.
I’d second the use of resin designed for this purpose. Just about any thermoplastic you can print with (except PEEK maybe, and not many printers print this) will deform at the temps you’ll want to autoclave, so I’d say FDM printing is out. Polymerized resin should handle this much better and should also have a smoother surface with less gaps for bugs to hide in. Quite a bit more expensive than FDM but that’s medicine I guess.
You can print with Taulman nylon. Can be sterilized in autoclave. See their website.
Thank you for your input!
I sent a mail to Stratasys regarding autoclaving the ABS M30i material. I found on another page that autoclave will damage ABS M30i…
Formlabs Dental SG resin looks like a very good choice. I will mail them and ask what equipment they use.
Kind Regards,
Chris
Formlabs resin can be printed on any SLA or DLP style printer; Formlabs will most likely recommend the Form2, which is the printer I use. I highly recommend it.
Sterilization like for a medical device?
I think this is something you’re going to have to experiment with. Radiation (Gamma or E-Beam) will cause embrittlement and color changes in most plastics as there’s a lot of cross linking of polymer structures. Some people tint polycarbonate plastic an ice blue color because it will turn a sickly yellow otherwise.
I can’t offer anything about Ethelene Oxide except it’s not very practical in small batches, and autoclave is probably not an option for any thermoplastic you can print.
Regards,
Matt
Contact Taulman 3D directly and discuss your plans with them.
As others here have said, SLA or DLP is far better than FDM printing if you want to reduce surface defects. FDM will leave large spaces for contaminants and bacteria to grow within, but the resin produces a much smoother surface at a microscopic level.
It’s not a problem, I know that PA2200 can be used in making medical cutting guides, but if you are looking for a material that is implantable you would have to run tests and studies.