The Industrial Science Report: 3D printing drives programmable industrial materials and new levels of process control

New additive manufacturing techniques give manufacturers control over material behavior with tunable properties and microstructure precision.
April 3, 2026
10 min read

Key Highlights

  • Materials like copper are now engineered through additive manufacturing to disintegrate or remain stable on demand.
  • Direct 3D printing of nanolasers onto semiconductor chips offers a flexible alternative to traditional lithography.
  • Innovative techniques engineer defects within energetic materials to precisely tune ignition and combustion properties.
  • Hybrid super foam uses in-foam additive manufacturing to create lightweight, energy-absorbing structures suitable for protective gear, automotive safety, and noise reduction.
  • Biomimetic nozzles inspired by mosquito proboscises enable ultra-fine, cost-effective 3D printing for tissue engineering and regenerative medicine.

A few weeks ago in The Industrial Science Report, I wrote about material development research in the automotive industry, which was largely moving away from trial-and-error experimentation, toward data-driven and predictive design, as well as processes that command more control over material development to key in on certain performance characteristics as it forms. This week’s collection of additive manufacturing research adds to the theme of programmable materials, where metals like copper are engineered to remain stable or self-destruct on command, nanolasers for data processing are printed directly onto microchips, and energetic materials are designed to control ignition parameters and safety. 

We see a similar concept with hybrid foams that dynamically redistribute impact forces and even bio-inspired 3D printing nozzles that slash costs while improving precision. Additive manufacturing is a key technology for engineering materials at the microstructure level. For manufacturers, these new materials could experience fewer equipment failures, but also add a new responsibility to understand, monitor, and maintain materials that have dynamic properties.

3D nanolasers support next-gen optical chips and quantum security

If copper showed us materials can be programmed, this work shows how additive manufacturing is building that control directly into semiconductor fabrication too. Researchers are now printing lasers directly onto semiconductor chips, as a viable path around the physical and economic limits of lithography. With additive approaches and by moving from horizontal to vertically printed nanolasers, this sidesteps lithography’s rigidity and opens the door for higher-density optical components.

About the Author

Anna Townshend

Anna Townshend

managing editor

Anna Townshend has been a journalist and editor for almost 20 years. She joined Control Design and Plant Services as managing editor in June 2020. Previously, for more than 10 years, she was the editor of Marina Dock Age and International Dredging Review. In addition to writing and editing thousands of articles in her career, she has been an active speaker on industry panels and presentations, as well as host for the Tool Belt and Control Intelligence podcasts. Email her at [email protected].

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