ESA 3D Prints First Metal Part on Space Station

The part will be brought back to Earth for quality analysis.

The first 3D printed metal part.
The first 3D printed metal part.
ESA

ESA’s Metal 3D Printer, a technology demonstrator, was launched to the International Space Station at the start of this year, after which ESA astronaut Andreas Mogensen installed the payload in the European Drawer Rack Mark II of ESA’s Columbus module.

In August, the printer successfully finished printing the first 3D metal shape. This first product, along with three others planned during the rest of the experiment, will be brought back to Earth for quality analysis: two of the samples will go to ESA’s technical heart in the Netherlands (ESTEC), another will go to ESA’s astronaut training centre in Cologne (EAC) for use in the LUNA facility, and the last will go to the Technical University of Denmark (DTU).

As exploration missions expand to the Moon and Mars, mission duration will increase, as will the importance of autonomy for the mission and its crew as resupply missions become more challenging. Additive manufacturing in space is a solution to this, providing an opportunity to manufacture needed parts, to repair equipment or construct dedicated tools, on demand during the mission, rather than relying on resupplies and redundancies.

Although the International Space Station has already hosted plastic 3D printers, ESA’s technology demonstrator is the first to successfully print a part in metal in microgravity conditions.The printer was built by Airbus and its partners, with Cranfield University in the UK involved in designing the printer's melting process and hardware, as well as its laser source, delivery optics, feedstock storage and feeding system. Print operations were overseen by CNES from their control centre for ISS payloads.

More in Aerospace