Custom Event Setup

×

Click on the elements you want to track as custom events. Selected elements will appear in the list below.

Selected Elements (0)
    Skip to content

    Cart

    Your cart is empty

    Why exposure energy (not time) is the real control variable in resin 3D printing

    Exposure time does not define curing. Exposure energy does.

    In resin 3D printing, exposure time is commonly used as the main process parameter.

    However, time alone does not define curing. The real control variable is exposure energy.

    Core principle

    Curing depends on the total energy delivered to the resin, which is the product of light intensity and exposure time.

    Why exposure time is misleading

    Time is only one part of the equation

    Exposure time is often treated as a direct control variable.

    Limitation

    The same exposure time can produce different results depending on light intensity.

    This leads to inconsistent curing across different printers.

    Energy defines curing behavior

    Intensity × time determines the result

    The curing process depends on the total energy dose received by the resin.

    Implication

    Low intensity with long exposure can produce similar curing to high intensity with short exposure.

    However, the resulting material behavior may still differ.

    Printer variability changes energy input

    Same time, different energy

    Different printers emit different light intensities, even with identical settings.

    Observed effect

    Two printers using the same exposure time can produce different curing depths and dimensions.

    This connects with printer variability.

    Light intensity is not constant

    Energy input drifts over time

    Light sources degrade and change output over time.

    Consequence

    The same exposure time delivers different energy at different stages of the printer lifecycle.

    This introduces long-term instability.

    Why fixed settings fail

    They assume constant energy

    Predefined settings assume that exposure conditions remain stable.

    Reality

    Energy input varies with machine, environment and time.

    This explains why exposure time is not universal.

    Energy affects more than curing depth

    Material behavior changes with dose

    Different energy levels affect mechanical properties, dimensional accuracy and surface quality.

    Examples

    Overexposure leads to overcuring and loss of detail, while underexposure leads to weak bonding.

    Controlled workflows manage energy, not time

    Calibration must be energy-based

    Reliable workflows adjust exposure based on actual curing response.

    Engineering approach

    Measure curing behavior, correlate it with energy input and define stable process windows.

    This is the basis of curing rate control.

    Energy is the real control variable

    Exposure time alone does not define curing. Only energy does.

    Understanding and controlling energy input is essential for reproducible and accurate resin 3D printing.

    Continue the engineering workflow

    Part of the 3Dresyns® Engineering Series

    This document is part of a framework connecting curing physics, calibration and controlled additive manufacturing.

    Continue reading