#qotojournal
I'm a PhD student obsessed with bio-based nanoparticles, so I'm trying my hand at 3D printing seaweed using at-home supplies. The troubleshooting is intense. Creating an at-home lab without funding is VERY HARD. Mashed seaweed was OK to print (with cellulose nanocrystals), but optimization? Yikes. Would love any tips !
@freckled that's very interesting. It makes me think that it should be possible to 3D print paper and cardboard, maybe using a cold extruder depositing a humid cellulose paste inside a oven to eliminate water at a particular rate. The material could also be inyected in metal molds (as in plastic injection) to be heathen afterwards (doesn't that exist already?)