MicroMakere3D

MicroMaker3D Speeds Prototyping of Tiny Technology

By Nancy Cates, contributing editor, UV+EB Technology With the ability to 3D-print a structure smaller than a human hair, RadLaunch winner MicroMaker3D is ready to...

Let’s Do a Deep Dive…on Underwater Strobes, UV Sources, Measurement and Reliability

This quarter’s column was inspired by an underwater photography blog (“How Good Are the Strobes for Light Intensity and Coverage?”1), generated by Reef Photo...

Top 5 Articles from 2023

While work on the first issue of 2024 is well underway, we paused to see which UV+EB Technology articles from 2023 caught the eyes...

Radiation Safety for Electron Beams

Radiation is one of those words that, as it passes from the scientific to the general lexicon, loses all nuance. For those who can...

Using UV to Cure at Vampire Optical Coatings

By Liz Stevens, writer, UV+EB Technology Vampire Optical Coatings Inc., Pataskala, Ohio, designs and manufactures coatings and coated films to control light reflectivity, refractive index...

RadTech Hosts Successful UV LED 2015

By David Savastano, editor, Ink World UV curing has been a growth area for years, and the technology has evolved over time. Now, for a...
PhotoCast

Start-up Offers Promising Cure for Conventional Fracture Care

By Nancy Cates, contributing writer UV+EB Technology Reboot Medical, a start-up company with offices at the Massachusetts Medical Device Development Center (M2D2) in Lowell, Massachusetts, is...

Incorporation of Carbon Nanotubes into UV-Polymerizable Formulations, Part 2

In the last issue of UV+EB Technology, we began a discussion about the preparation of nanocomposites made by incorporating carbon nanotubes into UV-polymerizable formulations....

Formulating for 3D printing: Constraints and Components for Stereolithography

By R.J. Viereckl, Michael Gould, Volker Petry, Rich Dodd, Xavier Marguerettaz and Sean Des Roches Rahn USA 3D printing is a technique that has been employed...
Differential-Scanning-Calorimetry

Understanding Glass Transition Temperature: Part 2

In the last edition of Professor’s Corner, we began a discussion of the glass transition temperature (Tg).1 In this issue, we will continue that...
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