LLNL uses the additive manufacturing technique known as Electrophoretic Deposition to shape the source particle material into a finished magnet geometry. The source particle material is dispersed in a liquid so that the particles can move freely. Electric fields in the shape of the finished product then draw the particles to the desired location to form a “green body”, much like an unfired…
Keywords
- Show all (49)
- Synthesis and Processing (19)
- Additive Manufacturing (7)
- Materials for Energy Products (6)
- Material Design (4)
- 3D Printing (2)
- Membranes (2)
- Rare Earth Elements (REEs) (2)
- Additively Manufactured (AM) Optics (1)
- Direct Air Capture (1)
- Instrumentation (1)
- Material Characterization (1)
- Structural Materials (1)
- (-) Magnet Compositions (1)
- (-) Multilayers (1)
Technology Portfolios
Image

The novel LLNL technique uses electric fields to drive and control assembly. In the literature such methods have heretofore only formed disordered ensembles. This innovative method increases local nanocrystal concentration, initiating nucleation and growth into ordered superlattices. Nanocrystals remain solvated and mobile throughout the process, allowing fast fabrication of ordered…