MIT startup Inkbit pairs multi-material inkjet 3D printer with machine vision, machine learning systems.
Inkbit’s 3D printer's vision system comprehensively scans each layer of the object as it’s being printed to correct errors in real-time, while the machine-learning system uses that information to predict the warping behavior of materials and make more accurate final products. An early-stage company with one operational production-grade printer. It will begin selling products later this year, starting with a pilot with Johnson and Johnson, before selling its printers next year. Inkbit is hoping to leverage current interest from companies that sell medical devices and other products, producers of everything from dental aligners to industrial tooling and sleep apnea masks.
Latest from Today's Medical Developments
- Therapeutic brain implants could defy the need for surgery
- Wrap up a year of manufacturing education with 2025’s final Lunch + Learn
- Brazilian President Lula da Silva to open HANNOVER MESSE 2026
- How national strategy can drive local opportunities
- GrindingHub Americas launches in 2027 in Cincinnati, Ohio
- Methods Machine Tools now offers the Nakamura-Tome NT-Flex
- Battelle awards $900,000 in STEM education grants to Ohio schools
- #55 Lunch + Learn Podcast with KINEXON