“…3D printing, also known as additive manufacturing (AM), has received widespread attention from academia and industry for its potential advantages, such as fabricating customized geometry without the need for molds or machining, reducing production costs and extending applicability to a wide range of materials. − Common 3D-printing techniques include fused deposition modeling (FDM), , selective laser sintering or melting (SLS/SLM), stereolithography (SLA)/digital light projection (DLP), , and so forth. In 2013, Tibbits et al from MIT first combined AM with smart materials that can change their shape in response to an applied stimulus such as temperature, electricity, light, radiation, and chemical stimuli (such as a pH change). , The use of smart materials in 3D printing adds the fourth dimension of time to create 3D-printed structures with programmable and adaptable shapes, properties, or functionalities and defined this new technology termed “4D printing”.…”