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ÇöÀçÀ§Ä¡ : HOME > ¸®Æ÷Æ® > Information Technology > IT±â¼ú
3D Printing Materials 2015-2025: Status, Opportunities, Market Forecasts
¹ßÇà»ç IDTechEx

¹ßÇàÀÏ 2015-11
ºÐ·® 132 pages
¼­ºñ½ºÇüÅ Report
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Table of Contents

1. EXECUTIVE SUMMARY

  • 1.1. Total Market of 3D Printing Industry
  • 1.2. 3D Printing Materials
  • 1.3. Markets for 3D Printing
  • 1.4. Value Network
  • 1.5. State of the Market
  • 1.6. Materials' Market separated by Material

2. INTRODUCTION

  • 2.1. 3D Printing is...
  • 2.2. A brief history of 3D Printing

3. KEY ADVANTAGES OF 3D PRINTING

  • 3.1. The key advantages of 3D printing are...
  • 3.2. Examples of designs not possible suing traditional manufacturing
  • 3.3. Examples of products which benefit from mass customisation

4. OVERVIEW OF 3D PRINTING TECHNOLOGIES

  • 4.1. A review of technologies
  • 4.2. Thermoplastic extrusion
  • 4.3. Stereolithography (SLA) and Direct Light Polymerisation (DLP)
  • 4.4. Ink-jetting Photopolymers
  • 4.5. Summary of plastic printing
  • 4.6. SLS, SLM and EBM
  • 4.7. Blown-Powder
  • 4.8. Welding
  • 4.9. Summary of metal printing
  • 4.10. Ink-jetting binders

5. MATERIALS OVERVIEW

  • 5.1. A review of materials
  • 5.2. Photopolymers
  • 5.3. Applications of 3D printed photopolymers
  • 5.4. Acrylates vs epoxies
  • 5.5. Photopolymer suppliers
  • 5.6. Properties of commercially available photopolymers
  • 5.7. Thermoplastic filament
  • 5.8. Applications of 3D printed thermoplastic filament
  • 5.9. Thermoplastic filament suppliers
  • 5.10. Polymers available from thermoplastic filament suppliers
  • 5.11. Properties of objects 3D printed from thermoplastic filament
  • 5.12. Chemical suppliers to thermoplastic filament formulators
  • 5.13. Thermoplastic powders
  • 5.14. Applications of 3D printed thermoplastic powders
  • 5.15. Thermoplastic powder suppliers
  • 5.16. Polymers offered by thermoplastic powders suppliers
  • 5.17. Comparison of 3D printed thermoplastic powders
  • 5.18. Metal powders
  • 5.19. Applications of 3D printed metal powders
  • 5.20. Metal powder suppliers
  • 5.21. Alloys available from metal powder suppliers
  • 5.22. Sand and binder
  • 5.23. Welding wire
  • 5.24. Application of 3D printed welding wire

6. EMERGING MATERIALS

  • 6.1. Overview
  • 6.2. Ceramics
  • 6.3. Carbon fibre
  • 6.4. Electrically conductive materials
  • 6.5. Silicone
  • 6.6. Biomaterials
  • 6.7. Regolith
  • 6.8. Graphene

7. DISRUPTIVE TECHNOLOGIES

  • 7.1. Thermoplastic recycling
  • 7.2. Metalysis
  • 7.3. Selective Deposition Lamination (SDL)
  • 7.4. Magnetohydrodynamics

8. PATENTS AND PUBLICATIONS

  • 8.1. Patents
  • 8.2. Publication trends

9. MARKETS

  • 9.1. Growth share matrix
  • 9.2. Hype cycle

10. VALUE CHAINS

  • 10.1. Value network
  • 10.2. The two value chains
  • 10.3. Three behaviours of thermoplastic filament consumption
  • 10.4. Prices
  • 10.5. Price trends of free market materials
  • 10.6. Value chain picture (in USD)
  • 10.7. Value chain picture (in tonnes)

11. STATE OF THE MARKET

  • 11.1. State of the market (in USD)
  • 11.2. State of the market (in tonnes)
  • 11.3. Geographic breakdown of materials' sales
  • 11.4. Data
  • 11.5. Methods and assumptions

12. FORECASTS 2015-2025

  • 12.1. Total market for 3D printing industry
  • 12.2. Data
  • 12.3. Materials market separated by material (in USD)
  • 12.4. Share of market value by material in 2014 and 2025
  • 12.5. Materials market forecast separated by material (in tonnes)
  • 12.6. Growth rate by region
  • 12.7. Data
  • 12.8. Methods and assumptions

13. TIMELINE

  • 13.1. Start-ups, mergers, acquisitions and closures

14. LIMITATIONS AND RESTRAINTS

  • 14.1. Current limitations
  • 14.2. Links to other technologies

15. PROFILES OF 3D MATERIALS' SUPPLIERS

  • 15.1. DSM
  • 15.2. Rahn
  • 15.3. Arevo
  • 15.4. TLC Korea
  • 15.5. Evonik
  • 15.6. Exceltec
  • 15.7. Oxford Perfomance Materials
  • 15.8. Taulman 3D
  • 15.9. Argen
  • 15.10. Cookson Gold
  • 15.11. LPW
  • 15.12. Sandvik
  • 15.13. Höganäs
  • 15.14. CRP
  • 15.15. Fripp Design

16. PROFILES OF END-USERS OF 3D PRINTING

  • 16.1. Lockheed Martin
  • 16.2. Boeing
  • 16.3. Ford
  • 16.4. Dyson
  • 16.5. GE Aviation
  • 16.6. BMW
  • 16.7. Reebok
  • 16.8. Addenbrooke's Hospital

17. OPPORTUNITIES

  • 17.1. Review of opportunities

18. COMPANY PROFILES

  • 18.1. 3D Ceram
  • 18.2. 3D Systems Europe
  • 18.3. Advanced Powders and Coatings
  • 18.4. Arcam AB
  • 18.5. Arevo Labs
  • 18.6. Argen Corporation
  • 18.7. Biobots
  • 18.8. BotFactory
  • 18.9. Canatu
  • 18.10. Cookson Precious Metals
  • 18.11. CRP Group
  • 18.12. Dyson
  • 18.13. EPSRC
  • 18.14. Evonik
  • 18.15. Fabrisonic LLC
  • 18.16. Fripp Design Ltd
  • 18.17. Graphene 3D Lab
  • 18.18. Höganäs
  • 18.19. Impossible Objects
  • 18.20. Legor Group
  • 18.21. Lomiko Metals
  • 18.22. LPW Technology Ltd
  • 18.23. LUXeXceL
  • 18.24. The NanoSteel Company
  • 18.25. NinjaFlex
  • 18.26. Norsk Titanium
  • 18.27. Orbital Composites
  • 18.28. Oxford Performance Materials
  • 18.29. Rahn AG
  • 18.30. Sandvik
  • 18.31. Solidscape
  • 18.32. Stratasys Ltd.
  • 18.33. Taulman3D
  • 18.34. TLC Korea
  • 18.35. Toner Plastics
  • 18.36. Volvo Construction Equipment
  • 18.37. Voxel8



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