Researchers at LSU have developed 3D printed, biodegradable beads for Mardi Gras to reduce waste from the famous parades in ...
With his mentor, Kerong Dai, a member of the Chinese Academy of Engineering, Wang has been examining every stage of biological 3D printing, from 3D models, surgical guides and implants ...
These LSU students have discovered a new way to make earth-friendly Mardi Gras beads, and they also make flowers.
The EarthWorks method incorporates additives such as straw and applies a wax-like coating to the soil material to prevent water loss from the concrete. With large-scale 3D printing, the ...
Taking inspiration from the way reptile and mammal limbs are structured but without their characteristic rigidity, the ...
Strain says that the 3D-printed beads are a little different from ... on them because we don't want to have heavy metals in the soil, but we are able to have some very fun colors." ...