Evolution of 3D Printing Methods and Materials for Electrochemical Energy Storage
Vladimir Egorov, Umair Gulzar, Yan Zhang, Siobh\'an Breen, and Colm, O'Dwyer

TL;DR
This paper reviews the evolution of 3D printing methods and materials specifically for electrochemical energy storage devices like batteries and supercapacitors, highlighting current challenges and future directions.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of the development of 3D printing techniques and materials tailored for energy storage applications, emphasizing the co-design of materials and methods.
Findings
Material purity and printing fidelity are crucial for device performance.
Different 3D printing methods suit various electrochemical materials.
Future advancements depend on integrated material and process development.
Abstract
Additive manufacturing has revolutionized the building of materials direct from design, allowing high resolution rapid prototyping in complex 3D designs with many materials. 3D printing hasenabled high strength damage-tolerant structures, bioprinted artificial organs and tissues, ultralight metals, medicine, education, prosthetics, architecture, consumer electronics,and as a prototyping tool for engineers and hobbyists alike. 3D printing has emerged as a useful tool for complex electrode and material assembly method for batteries and supercapacitors in recent years. The field initially grew from extrusion-based methods such as fused deposition modelling, and evolved to photopolymerization printing of intricate composites, while supercapacitor technologies less sensitive to solvents more often involved material jetting processes. Underpinning every part of a 3D printable battery and many…
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