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Additive Manufacturing of Metamaterials

The National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) Additive Manufacturing (AM) Program studies the characteristics, material properties, and behaviors of biomaterials to develop metrology tools and measurement standards for AM. If you are interested in collaboration opportunities, or want to learn more about our efforts in metamaterials AM, please contact us

Learn about our metamaterials AM work by exploring the content below:
Publications | News

A schematic shows an opaque sheet with a ring-shaped opening layered over the left side of the metamaterial flat lens. Ultraviolet light shines from the left side of the metamaterial, through the ring-shaped opening, to the other side of the lens, where it's projected as a 3D ring of light.
A NIST team created an ultraviolet (UV) metamaterial formed of alternating nanolayers of silver and titanium dioxide. A sample object is placed on the flat slab of metamaterial, and when illuminated with UV light, produces a ring-shaped opening that is replicated and projected as a 3D image in free space on the other side of the slab.
Credit: Lezec/NIST

Publications

Click the plus icon (+) below to explore our publications on additive manufacturing of metamaterials. 

An Autonomous Design Algorithm to Experimentally Realize Three-Dimensionally Isotropic Auxetic Network Structures Without Compromising Density (2024)
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Pruning the Mechanical Impedance of Three-Dimensional Disordered Networks (2022)
Read more.

News

Click the plus icon (+) below to explore news about our metamaterials additive manufacturing efforts. 

Spotlight: Collaboration With CHiMaD to Build New Materials That Can Take a Hit

Impact in 3 … 2 … 1 … Meet Marcos Reyes-Martinez, a NIST researcher working to build new materials that could protect fragile items in transit, spacecraft surrounded by stellar debris and even your noggin at a football scrimmage. Read more.

A man wearing safety goggles leans over a scientific device.
NIST's Marcos Reyes-Martinez tests the compression strength of a 3D-printed metamaterial.
Credit: J. Stoughton/NIST

Contacts

Additive Manufacturing Program Coordinator

Created November 15, 2024, Updated November 18, 2024