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Vader Systems’ invention may be quantum leap in manufacturing

Vader Systems' liquid 3-D printing could revolutionize how things are made.

By GROVE POTTER

Published January 17, 2017 This content is archived.

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“It’s a transformative technology … I think its application base will continue to broaden and expand for the foreseeable future. ”
Edward Furlani, professor
Department of Chemical and Biological Engineering

A breakthrough idea five years ago by a then 19-year-old UB student has led to creation of a machine that prints three-dimensional objects using liquid metal, an invention that could represent a significant transformation in manufacturing.

Vader Systems, part of the START-UP NY program, is innovating and building the machines in a factory in the CrossPoint Business Park in Getzville. Scott Vader, a mechanical engineer, is the CEO. His son, Zack Vader, the former UB student, is chief technology officer. Zach’s mother, Pat Roche, is controller.

The machine is so novel it represents a quantum leap in the ability to print three-dimensional objects in metal. Other metal printers exist, but most use a process of laying down powered metal and melting it with a laser or electron beam. In that process, some particles of the powder do not get melted, creating weakened spots.

Manufacturers are very interested in the Vader machine, with one automotive parts maker expressing an interest in eventually buying at least 50 of them. A printer with multiple nozzles could cost more than $1 million.

Working closely with UB Engineering

UB has been a source of intellectual assistance, grants and personnel for the startup as it transforms from a brilliant idea into an industry.

The Vaders were working on their invention in the basement of their home in Amherst when Scott decided to reach out to UB for help. “We were working alone in our basement and tackling some pretty deep technical problems,” he says.

“We knocked at the door of the university and they welcomed us in,” he says. “They set up an impressive first meeting with faculty experts within UB, and they said, ‘What are you trying to do? What are your problems and how can we help?’”

The Vaders now have three faculty advisers, are part of the START-UP NY tax-free entrepreneurial program, and have won grants from UB’s Center for Industrial Effectiveness (UB TCIE) and UB’s Center for Advanced Biomedical and Bioengineering Technology (UB CAT), as well as a National Grid grant through UB.

In addition — and perhaps most importantly — Scott Vader says, access to university students for internships has helped the company grow. Vader Systems already has hired three mechanical engineering graduates.

“This is what makes really good young engineers: to go from the theory and being able to mix in an internship with a local industry,” he says. “They realize that the lab they took is something a company really needs.”

(l-r) Zack and Scott Vader with their Vader Systems factory in the background.

From left: Zach and Scott Vader inside their Amherst factory. Photo: Douglas Levere.

Inspiration spawned by disappointment

Zack Vader, now 24, started focusing on metal printing when his plans to hire a company to 3-D print parts for a microturbine generator were stymied. No company could print the parts he needed, so he decided to make his own metal printer. His breakthrough came when he thought to expose molten metal in a confined chamber with an orifice to a pulsed magnetic field. The transient field induces a pressure with the metal that ejects a droplet. That was the key to making droplets of liquid metal eject from a nozzle.

Edward P. Furlani, professor in UB’s departments of Chemical and Biological Engineering, and Electrical Engineering, explains that Vader’s process mimics drop-on-demand inkjet printing and is based on the principles of magnetohydrodynamics; i.e. the manipulation of conductive fluids using a magnetic field. In Vader’s device, an electrically pulsed magnetic field permeates liquid metal in an ejection chamber and creates circulating electrical currents that interact with the magnetic field to produce a pressure that squeezes a droplet out of the ejector nozzle.

“It’s a transformative technology,” Furlani says. “It’s very exciting interdisciplinary engineering. I think its application base will continue to broaden and expand for the foreseeable future.”

Ciprian N. Ionita, research assistant professor in the Department of Biomedical Engineering — a joint effort of the School of Engineering and Applied Sciences and the Jacobs School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences — foresees the Vader Systems printer ultimately printing out custom stents and other surgical devices right in the hospital.

“This is a game-changer,” he says, because the metal powder used in the current metal printing processes is a contaminant that is difficult to clean up and can be toxic inside the body.

The Vader printer also will be valuable making custom knee and hip replacements, he says.

Cheaper, faster, better

The third UB professor advising the Vaders, Chi Zhou, assistant professor in the Department of Industrial and Systems Engineering, and a 3-D printing expert, notes another advantage of the Vader system is that it is “much, much cheaper” than using powered metal.

“I can see at this stage that it can complement traditional metal printing, but later, maybe 10 years later, it can dominate the metal-printing market because it can print better quality, cheaper and faster,” Zhou says.

Zhou has helped write original open-source software to control the printer. “If they want to add functionality, we can. We have the source code,” he says.

One of the most fascinating qualities of a 3-D printer is that a complex part is just as cheap to make as a simple part.

“Complexity does not add cost,” Zack Vader says, which is the opposite of traditional manufacturing. That makes the machines very attractive to companies making many complex parts.

Close-up of a hand holding aluminum pieces printed using a Vader machine.

Two products printed with Vader Systems' liquid metal printing machine. Photo: Douglas Levere.

Steel printing on the horizon

On a Vader machine, a strand of aluminum is fed into a heat element that melts it at 750 degrees Celsius (1,382 degrees Fahrenheit). The liquefied metal is then passed to a ceramic tube that forms an ejection chamber and has a submillimeter orifice. A magnetic coil surrounds the tube and receives a short-lived electrical pulse to create a pressure within the tube that ejects a droplet of liquid metal through the orifice. The ejected drop is projected downward onto a heated platform that maneuvers to create solid 3-D shapes based on layer-by-layer deposition and the coalescence of the droplets.

Zack Vader says plans are to modify the device, adding nozzles to make it faster. Eventually, the machines will be able to melt and print steel at 1,400 C (2,552 F).

As the machine evolves, the Vaders plan to expand their operation into an assembly-line manufacturing facility.

Applications for the device run the gamut. Scott Vader says the automotive industry may be interested in making parts that are now solid metal into hollow and honey-combed structures. The hollow parts would be lighter, stronger and much cheaper.

And as for the tiny generator that Zack Vader was hoping to print, it may emerge again someday, now that the technology to make it is advancing.

“That’s just been put on the shelf for a while,” he says.