Why low shrinkage claims are often misunderstood in resin 3D printing
All photopolymer resins shrink during curing. The real problem is not shrinkage alone, but how it interacts with overcuring.
Low shrinkage is one of the most common selling points in resin 3D printing.
However, shrinkage alone does not define dimensional accuracy. In many cases, it is only one side of a more complex interaction.
Photopolymer resins shrink when curing from liquid to solid. At the same time, light propagation causes overcuring and dimensional growth. Real accuracy is defined by the balance between these two opposing effects.
Shrinkage is inherent to photopolymers
Liquid-to-solid transformation always reduces volume
All photopolymer resins undergo volumetric shrinkage during curing.
Polymerization increases molecular density and reduces free volume.
This contraction cannot be eliminated, only controlled.
Fast resins tend to shrink more
High reactivity increases contraction effects
Fast resins typically contain higher concentrations of photoinitiators and accelerators.
Faster polymerization leads to stronger internal stresses and higher effective shrinkage.
This is often combined with increased brittleness and reduced dimensional stability.
At the same time: overcuring expands geometry
Light does not stop at the layer boundary
During exposure, light penetrates beyond the intended geometry.
Additional material is cured around and below the target layer.
This produces dimensional growth, especially in the Z direction.
Critical zones: flat areas and trapped resin
Localized energy accumulation
In flat surfaces, cavities or regions between supports, resin can remain partially trapped.
Repeated exposure cycles cure this trapped resin progressively.
This leads to thickening, especially in Z, and loss of dimensional control.
Two opposing effects define the result
Contraction vs overgrowth
Real parts are affected by two simultaneous mechanisms:
Material shrinkage reduces dimensions, while overcuring increases them.
The final geometry is the result of the balance between both effects.
Why low shrinkage claims are misleading
They isolate one variable
Marketing often focuses only on shrinkage reduction.
Even low-shrinkage resins can produce dimensional error if overcuring is not controlled.
Ignoring light propagation leads to incomplete understanding of accuracy.
What actually improves dimensional accuracy
Control of curing behavior
Accuracy requires managing both shrinkage and overcuring simultaneously.
Adjust exposure, control light penetration, tune formulation and validate geometry-specific behavior.
This is consistent with curing rate control.
Conclusion
Accuracy is not defined by shrinkage alone
Low shrinkage does not guarantee dimensional accuracy.
Real performance is defined by the interaction between contraction and overcuring, and by how well this interaction is controlled.
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Part of the 3Dresyns® Engineering Series
This document is part of a broader framework connecting material behavior, curing control and dimensional validation.