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The quest for rare wood is endangering forests. Now we can just 3D-print replicas made from wood waste instead.

We can 3D-print wood now

[Photo: Desktop Metal]

BY Adele Peters3 minute read

The most trafficked wild product in the world isn’t ivory or rhino horn, but rosewood, an endangered tree verging on extinction as demand for rosewood furniture in China clears out forests in places like Madagascar. But what if an identical material could be 3D printed from wood waste?

[Photo: Desktop Metal]
Two years ago, pioneers in the 3D printing industry started exploring new materials. “We realized really quickly that wood waste is a material that could be transformed for 3D printing,” says Virginia San Fratello, chair of the design department at San Jose State University and one of the founders ofForust, a startup that is now launching as part of Desktop Metal, a larger 3D printing company. The new process can print wood with a grain that mimics any type of tree, from ash to mahogany.

The technology uses two byproducts from the wood industry. “A tree is made of lignin and cellulose,” says Ric Fulop, CEO of Desktop Metal. “When you make things out of trees, whether it’s furniture or paper, you’re essentially dematerializing the tree…what we’re trying to do is put that back together.” The process spreads thin layers of sawdust, and inkjets a nontoxic binder (including lignin, the part of natural wood that helps hold it together) to recreate the grain of wood layer by layer.

[Photo: Desktop Metal]
Unlike particle board or laminate, the grain goes fully through the material, so it can be sanded and refinished like wood. A product like a chair or bowl can also be printed in its finished form, without waste. It’s also possible to easily print detailed shapes. “We can make incredibly complex geometries that would probably take a craftsman weeks or a month,” says San Fratello. “That kind of complexity is free with additive manufacturing.” Over time, designers might use the process to make materials that go beyond the qualities of natural wood—a guitar or a speaker, for example, could potentially look like wood but have characteristics in the grain that help improve the sound of the product.

[Photo: Desktop Metal]
Each year, an estimated 15 billion trees are cut down (at the same time that companies and countries are spending billions to try to protect forests for their climate benefits). Only some of that wood is logged sustainably. And much of each tree still ends up as waste. There’s a huge supply of the sawdust and lignin needed for 3D printed wood. “They pay you to pick it up,” says Fulop. “It’s going into landfill right now. Hundreds of millions of metric tons of waste is generated every year just in the U.S. alone.” The process could also make use of small branches that wouldn’t be used for lumber, but that need to be cleared out of forests in places like California to help prevent forest fires.

[Photo: Desktop Metal]
The company plans to work with companiesand designersto make furniture, architectural accents, and home goods (but not, Fulop says, something like two-by-four lumber); it’s already working with Yves Behar’s Fuseproject on its first collection. The cost of the final product is competitive with wood, and with complex or large designs, may be less expensive. It can be mass-produced quickly at a large scale, but the company envisions one of the benefits being the fact that it can be printed locally on demand, so products don’t have to be shipped long distances.

If a product eventually breaks or wears out, it could be potentially be ground out and reprinted into something new. For companies that are aiming for circularity, such as Ikea, it could conceivably be one way to change how furniture is made. “This is the first time you have a circular process for wood manufacturing,” says Fulop.

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Adele Peters is a senior writer at Fast Company who focuses on solutions to climate change and other global challenges, interviewing leaders from Al Gore and Bill Gates to emerging climate tech entrepreneurs like Mary Yap. She contributed to the bestselling book "Worldchanging: A User's Guide for the 21st Century" and a new book from Harvard's Joint Center for Housing Studies called State of Housing Design 2023 More


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