3D printing could push new frontiers in SSL manufacturing (MAGAZINE)

March 28, 2018
LRC scientists provide a snapshot of a new way to model SSL success, based on their research into 3D printing, or additive manufacturing.

LRC scientists NADARAJAH NARENDRAN and INDIKA PERERA provide a snapshot of a new way to model SSL success, based on their research into 3D printing, or additive manufacturing.

In the past couple of decades, the lighting industry has been transformed by the advent of the LED, a type of solid-state lighting (SSL) technology. At present, LED-based lighting solutions are employed in numerous general illumination as well as specialty lighting applications due to their energy efficiency, durability, reduced size, and fewer maintenance requirements. These advantages, combined with customizable and unique lighting fixtures that cater to the specific design and needs of the space to be illuminated, provide desirable benefits to the built environment.

Although LED lighting has become a mature technology, a new technology is quickly rising as a potential benefit to the LED and SSL industries. Additive manufacturing is the fabrication of a 3D object by depositing a polymer-based material using print heads, nozzles, or other material deposition or solidification processes using a layer by layer approach with digital information from a computer-aided design (CAD) model. The ability to achieve product customization and design uniqueness is the primary reason for merging lighting with additive manufacturing. The benefits of additive manufacturing for SSL include custom fixtures and components, improved visual appeal and functionality, rapid prototyping, faster new product introductions, and reduced fixture cost.

NADARAJAH NARENDRAN

In terms of fixture manufacturing, the use of additive manufacturing would allow lighting professionals to manufacture custom lighting fixtures on-site during new construction and retrofit building projects. Past investigations have demonstrated successful additive manufacturing of attractive lighting fixture enclosures. Additionally, with rapid developments in LED technology and the exploding number of LED fixtures introduced into the market every year, manufacturers are forced to stock a growing number of stock keeping units (SKUs) to service their customers for years after a sale. This is another area where additive manufacturing can help manufacturers by reducing stocking requirements for fixtures and parts, and instead printing them as needed.

INDIKA PERERA

Overall, additive manufacturing within the SSL fixture industry could pave the way for mass customization and changes to architectural lighting practice through on-time, on-demand manufacturing of lower-cost, custom lighting systems. Additive manufacturing can also reduce the carbon footprint and improve the sustainability of SSL by not making fixtures halfway across the globe and shipping them to the building site. Furthermore, additive manufacturing can bring back manufacturing to the US and thus create employment opportunities and improve the local economy.

In addition to fixture manufacturing, there are several potential opportunities for additive manufacturing at the component and subcomponent level. One unique aspect of LED system manufacturing is that an LED system requires structural, thermomechanical, electrical, and optical components. Past investigations have explored the use of additive manufacturing for creating the functional components needed for system operation, such as heat sinks, electrical traces, and optics. The Lighting Research Center has conducted its own preliminary research to understand the advantages and challenges of custom SSL components and the characterization of these 3D printed components. (Find additional documents and publications on the LRC website at: http://bit.ly/2o4muBU).

The potential benefits for additive manufacturing in the SSL industry are clear, but challenges need to be overcome in order to successfully explore these opportunities. These challenges include the availability of suitable materials to meet the required functions of the printed subcomponents. An integrated approach is also needed to combine different parts to fabricate a product with multiple materials and functionalities. Finally, faster fabrication and integration are required to meet the needs of LED luminaire fabrication and use in various applications, such as on-demand fabrication. Overcoming these technical challenges will aid not only the SSL industry, but also other industries that require electrical, thermal, and optical solutions such as consumer electronics, medical, automotive, and aerospace.