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Scientists demonstrate 3D printing identification method with terahertz imaging

Researchers at Carnegie Mellon and Microsoft Research have developed a method of marking 3D printed objects and reading the marks with terahertz imaging.

The 3D printing process used to produce an object can simultaneously generate an internal, invisible tag, say the scientists. These internal tags, which the researchers have dubbed InfraStructs, can be read with an imaging system using terahertz (THz) radiation, which can safely penetrate many common materials.

In proof-of-concept experiments, Karl Willis, a recent PhD graduate in computational design at Carnegie Mellon, and Andy Wilson, a principal researcher at Microsoft Research, have demonstrated several possible tag designs and the terahertz imaging and data processing steps necessary to read them.

The tags themselves come at no extra cost, Willis said, but terahertz imaging, still in its infancy, can be expensive. As this imaging technology matures and becomes more affordable, however, InfraStructs could be used for a number of applications beyond keeping track of inventory or making point-of-sale transactions.

For instance, they could help mobile robots recognise or differentiate between objects. They might encode information into custom accessories used in game systems. Or, they might enable new tabletop computing scenarios in which objects can be sensed regardless of whether they are stacked, buried or inserted inside other objects.

Willis and Wilson will present their findings on 25 July at SIGGRAPH 2013, the International Conference on Computer Graphics and Interactive Techniques, in Anaheim, California.

Unlike conventional manufacturing, every single part produced with digital fabrication techniques, such as 3D printing and laser cutting, can differ from the next, even in subtle ways. ‘You probably don’t want to have visible barcodes or QR codes on every object you make,’ Willis said. Inserting a radio frequency identification (RFID) tag into each component would be a possibility, he acknowledged, but for now that would require interrupting the normal 3D printing process.

InfraStructs, by contrast, can be made with the same layer-by-layer process used for producing the object. In some cases, information can be encoded by positioning bubbles or voids inside the object; those voids reflect terahertz radiation. In other cases, materials that are reflective of terahertz radiation might be used to encode the information or create images inside the object.

‘The ability to embed 3D patterns gives designers new opportunities in creating objects that are meant to be sensed and tracked,’ Wilson said. ‘One idea is to embed a code just under the surface of the object, so that a terahertz beam can recover its position on the surface, wherever it strikes the object.’

Terahertz radiation falls between microwaves and infrared light on the electromagnetic spectrum. It can penetrate many common plastics, papers and textiles but, unlike X-rays, does not harm to biological tissues. Terahertz imaging has yet to be fully commercialised.

Additional research on materials, fabrication processes and imaging techniques will be necessary if the tags are to be widely adopted.

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