“…Second, it can realise the flexible design and manufacture of structural parts with complex shapes, breaking the limitations of the form in traditional ceramic processing technology, and third, it makes personalised designs and structures feasible, to meet the needs of different groups. At present, the main techniques for the additive manufacturing of ceramic parts are as follows: vat photopolymerisation, such as stereolithography (SL) (Jacobs 1992;Chen et al 2010), material jetting, such as inkjet printing (IJP) (Derby 2011;Tan, Tran, and Chua 2016;Saengchairat, Tran, and Chua 2017;Chen, Ouyang, et al 2018), and binder jetting , material extrusion (Tian et al 2017), such as fused deposition manufacturing (FDM) (Danforth 2016;Cano et al 2019) and direct ink writing (DIW) Elsayed et al 2019), powder bed fusion, such as selective laser sintering (SLS) (Yuan, Shen, et al 2019;Chen, Wu, et al 2018) and selective laser melting (SLM) (Minasyan et al 2018;Chen, Li, Wu, et al 2019;Yu et al 2019), and binder jetting, such as three dimensional printing Huang et al 2019). Digital-light-processing (DLP) (Felzmann et al 2012;Mei et al 2019), as a derivative technology of stereolithography, is capable of curing a whole layer in one time period without the need for a laser light source, yet maintaining the high accuracy and surface quality of SL, which can greatly advance printing efficiency and reduce production costs at the same time.…”