3D printing consisted of in-situ UV-curing module can build complex 3D structures, in which direct ink writing can handle versatile materials. However, UV-based direct ink writing (DIW) is facing a trade-off between required curing intensity and effectiveness range, and it cannot implement multiscale parallelization at ease. We overcome these difficulties by ink design and introducing near-infrared (NIR) laser assisted module, and this increases the scalability of direct ink writing to solidify the deposited filament with diameter up to 4 mm, which is much beyond any of existing UV-assisted DIW. The NIR effectiveness range can expand to tens of centimeters and deliver the embedded writing capability. We also demonstrate its parallel manufacturing capability for simultaneous curing of multi-color filaments and freestanding objects. The strategy owns further advantages to be integrated with other types of ink-based 3D printing technologies for extensive applications.
This work studies the average age of information (AoI) of a monitoring system in which two sensors are sensing the same physical process and update status to a common monitor using their dedicated channels. Generally, using redundant devices to update the status of a process can improve the information timeliness at the monitor, but the disordered arrivals of updates also make the AoI analysis challenging. To that end, we model the system as two M/M/1/1 parallel status updating queues. By leveraging tools from stochastic hybrid system (SHS), we provide a general approach to analyze the average AoI, whereas a closed-form expression can be obtained when the status arrival rates and/or the service rates are the same for the two sensors. Numerical results validate the correctness of the theoretical analysis.
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