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    How to re-disperse 3Dresyn PEDOTEK1 before printing

    3DresynsTechnical Note
    PEDOTEK1 Re-dispersion Guide

    3Dresyn PEDOTEK1 and PEDOTEK1 Bio (both referred to throughout this document as "PEDOTEK1") are electrically conductive 3D-printing resins based on PEDOT:PSS.

    Like all conductive dispersions, they should be re-homogenized before use. This guide shows why the material settles during storage, and how to bring it back to a uniform, printable state.

    3Dresyn PEDOTEK1 contains conductive PEDOT:PSS particles dispersed within a photopolymer matrix — it is a dispersion, not a solution. Sedimentation, phase separation, agglomeration and viscosity changes during storage or transport are normal characteristics of conductive dispersions, and are typically reversible after proper re-homogenization.

    1Normal & reversible

    What settling looks like — and how it recovers

    The conductive phase in PEDOTEK1 can settle and agglomerate over time, especially after transport or temperature changes. This is expected, and it does not mean the material is spent. With proper mixing, the material returns to a uniform, printable dispersion.

    The presence of visible agglomerates, sedimented conductive phase or heterogeneous appearance does not, by itself, indicate that the material is defective.

    PEDOTEK1 sedimented and agglomerated after storage
    Step 1 · After storage

    Sedimented

    Visible agglomeration and a separated layer — the normal starting point.

    PEDOTEK1 being re-dispersed
    Step 2 · Re-dispersing

    Mixing

    Mechanical or acoustic energy breaks up agglomerates and redistributes the conductive phase.

    PEDOTEK1 re-dispersed to a uniform conductive dispersion
    Step 3 · Ready to print

    Re-dispersed

    A uniform, flowable conductive dispersion again.

    2The basics

    Why conductive dispersions settle

    PEDOTEK1 carries a solid conductive PEDOT:PSS phase suspended in a liquid photopolymer matrix. Because the conductive particles are denser than the matrix, they gradually settle and can cluster into agglomerates. Conductivity in the finished print depends on rebuilding a continuous conductive network throughout the resin — which begins with full re-dispersion before printing.

    3How to re-disperse

    Two reliable methods

    Use mechanical or acoustic energy to break up agglomerates and redistribute the conductive PEDOT:PSS phase back into the matrix. Both methods below reach the same result — choose the one that fits your equipment, and always mix until the resin is visually uniform. Proper re-dispersion is necessary to rebuild a homogeneous conductive network throughout the resin prior to printing.

    PEDOTEK1 re-dispersed with an FSH-2A high-speed homogenizer
    Method A · Recommended

    High-shear homogenization

    • EquipmentRotor-stator high-speed homogenizer (FSH-2A, IKA Ultra-Turrax T25, Silverson L5M-A or equivalent)
    • Time~1–2 minutes, until visually uniform
    • WhyHigh local shear is the most effective way to break PEDOT:PSS agglomerates
    Re-dispersed PEDOTEK1 drawn down on glass after homogenization
    After high-shear homogenization, drawn down on glass.
    PEDOTEK1 in an ultrasonic bath
    Method B

    Ultrasonic bath

    • EquipmentHeated ultrasonic bath
    • Conditions~10 minutes at ~30 °C
    • WhyAcoustic cavitation redistributes the conductive phase without direct mechanical contact
    Re-dispersed PEDOTEK1 drawn down on glass after ultrasonic treatment
    After ultrasonic treatment, drawn down on glass.
    Method
    Typical time
    Notes
    High-shear homogenizer — recommended
    ~1–2 min
    Most effective; mix until visually uniform.
    Ultrasonic bath (heated)
    ~10 min at ~30 °C
    Effective no-contact option.
    Manual / orbital / roller mixing
    Until uniform
    Suitable for routine re-mixing of lightly settled material. For heavy agglomeration, finish with high-shear or ultrasonic. Validate the time for your volume.
    !

    Do not filter the resin

    Do not filter PEDOTEK1 or PEDOTEK1 Bio through paint filters, paper filters or mesh screens. The conductive PEDOT:PSS particles are part of the formulation, and filtering removes them — permanently reducing the electrical performance of the resin and the printed part. Re-disperse instead of filtering.

    4After mixing

    What to expect

    After re-dispersion the resin returns to a uniform, flowable, dark dispersion. A small amount of very fine particulate may remain — this is normal for a PEDOT:PSS conductive dispersion. A quick way to confirm uniformity is to draw a thin film down on a glass slide, as shown above.

    5Best practice

    Do & don’t

    Do

    • Re-homogenize fully before every print job and after extended storage.
    • Start with a small quantity to dial in time and intensity, then scale up on your equipment.
    • Keep the container well sealed and refrigerated between uses.
    • Mix until visually homogeneous, with no remaining clusters.

    Don’t

    • Don’t filter the resin — filtering removes conductive PEDOT:PSS particles and lowers conductivity.
    • Don’t over-process. Excess time, temperature or shear can raise viscosity and cause gel-like behaviour, destabilization and, under certain conditions, premature curing and/or polymerization.
    • Don’t rely on aggressive UV over-curing or harsh drying; these can embrittle the part and disrupt the conductive network.
    6Get reliable results

    Storage, shelf life & measuring conductivity

    Storage

    Store sealed and cool (refrigerated). Within the declared shelf life, settling is reversible by re-homogenization.

    Conductivity

    PEDOTEK1 contains a high water fraction; conductivity is process-dependent, not intrinsic. Use a four-point probe — two-point handheld meters are strongly affected by contact resistance.

    Curing

    Calibrate exposure with a cure-depth (CRT) method for your printer rather than fixed seconds, and avoid prolonged UV over-exposure.

    7FAQ

    Frequently asked questions

    My resin contains visible particles. Is it defective?+
    No. PEDOTEK1 is a conductive dispersion, and some sedimentation or agglomeration may occur during storage or transport. Re-homogenize before use until the resin is visually uniform; a small amount of fine residual particulate after mixing is normal for a conductive dispersion.
    Will conductivity be affected?+
    Only if the material is not properly re-dispersed before printing. Conductivity depends on a continuous conductive network, which is restored by full re-homogenization, controlled curing and drying, and correct measurement (four-point probe).
    Can I filter the resin?+
    No. Filtering may remove the conductive PEDOT:PSS particles and reduce electrical performance. Always re-disperse rather than filter.
    How often should I mix the resin?+
    Before every print job and after extended storage — the conductive phase can settle between uses, even under refrigeration.
    8The result

    From re-dispersed resin to functional conductive part

    Once re-homogenized, the conductive PEDOT:PSS phase is uniformly redistributed: the resin draws down into a continuous, even conductive film and is ready to 3D-print into functional parts.

    Functional conductive part 3D-printed in PEDOTEK1 at 500 µm resolution
    A real conductive part 3D-printed in PEDOTEK1 
    9Support

    When to contact us

    Sedimentation and agglomeration are normal and reversible, as described above. Please contact 3Dresyns technical service, quoting your order and lot details, if any of the following occurs:

    • The material cannot be re-dispersed after appropriate homogenization.
    • Complete solidification of the resin is observed.
    • Abnormal curing or gelation occurs during storage.