Carnegie Mellon University

Image of 3D printed ears

June 05, 2018

Researchers Use Experts, Automation To Optimize 3D Printing

By Emily Durham

Emily Durham
  • College of Engineering
  • 412-268-2406

Researchers in Carnegie Mellon University's College of Engineering have developed a novel approach to optimizing soft material 3D printing. The Expert-Guided Optimization (EGO) method combines expert judgment with an optimization algorithm that efficiently searches combinations of parameters relevant for 3D printing, enabling high-fidelity soft material products to be printed.

The researchers who designed the EGO method include lead author Sara Abdollahi, a Ph.D. student in biomedical engineering; Adam Feinberg, associate professor of biomedical engineering and materials science and engineering; Alex Davis, assistant professor of engineering and public policy; and Dietrich College of Humanities and Social Sciences Professor John Miller.

In their paper, "Expert-guided optimization for 3D printing of soft and liquid materials," which was published in PLOS One, the researchers demonstrate the EGO method using liquid polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) elastomer resin, a material often used in wearable sensors and medical devices. They used a printing method called freeform reversible embedding (FRE), in which soft materials are deposited within a gel support bath.


Adam Feinberg describes and demonstrates his work in 3-D printing soft materials.

When it comes to 3D printing soft materials, many parameters can affect the final product. How fast the head of the 3D printer moves, the consistency of the gel bath in which the product is printed and the concentrations of each material in the print are just a few of the variables that can affect the final product. In each print, there can be dozens of parameters to take into account, and many more possible combinations of them.

A typical optimization model or experimental design will focus on a few parameters considered most important to the print. However, adapting these optimization models for experimental materials, whose 3D printing characteristics aren't well known, can be extremely challenging.

"When 3D printing thermoplastics, if you have just five or 10 main print parameters and want to explore, say, five levels of each, a factorial design can result in millions of possible combinations of settings to print," Abdollahi said. "The combinations become even more daunting when exploring an experimental material whose print characteristics are unknown. For example, if the experimental material has 20 print parameters with five levels, the experimenter can have trillions of combinations of print settings to explore."

However, with the EGO model, this challenge can be made less of an obstacle because experts are able to rule out many combinations as being ineffective. By combining an expert's scientific judgment with efficient search algorithms, EGO significantly reduces the time and energy required to find combinations that yield optimal 3D prints for experimental materials.

"The purpose of EGO is to create an effective search algorithm that explicitly combines both expert knowledge and traditional search algorithms," Davis said. "Typically we think of machine learning being useful for big data, but EGO works in situations when we have little or no data and need to rely on expert judgment, then through a combination of search algorithms and the expert's knowledge, effectively transition from small to big data."

The EGO model is comprised of three steps. First, a human expert selects the initial set of parameters, giving the algorithm the boundaries for search. Then, a hill climbing algorithm searches within those boundaries for promising combinations of those parameters, resulting in a "local optimum." Finally, the expert evaluates the local optimum and decides whether to alter the search process by adding new parameters, or continue to search within the existing boundaries. The process repeats until an ideal solution is found.

The EGO method, which can extend beyond the 3D printing of soft materials for a variety of engineering processes, has great potential as a systematic tool to discover the key parameters that yield reproducible, high-quality, novel materials.