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    Why light uniformity matters more than peak intensity in resin 3D printing

    High light intensity does not guarantee good results. Uniform light distribution does.

    In resin 3D printing, light intensity is often used as a key specification.

    However, the spatial distribution of that light is often more important than its peak value.

    Core principle

    Uniform curing requires uniform energy distribution. Variations in light intensity across the build area lead directly to dimensional and mechanical variability.

    Why peak intensity is misleading

    Maximum output does not define real exposure conditions

    Printer specifications often highlight peak light intensity values.

    Limitation

    Peak intensity does not describe how light is distributed across the build platform.

    A system can have high intensity but poor uniformity.

    Real curing depends on local irradiance

    Each position receives different energy

    If light distribution is not uniform, different areas of the build platform receive different energy doses.

    Observed effect

    Parts printed in the center and at the edges behave differently.

    This connects with spatial variability effects.

    Non-uniformity creates dimensional variability

    Same settings, different results

    Even with identical exposure time and material, non-uniform light leads to different curing depths.

    Consequence

    Dimensional inaccuracies, inconsistent layer adhesion and variable surface quality across the build area.

    Uniformity affects reproducibility

    Consistency requires stable conditions

    Reproducible manufacturing depends on consistent curing behavior.

    Key point

    If energy input varies spatially, results cannot be fully controlled.

    This directly impacts process reproducibility.

    High intensity can increase overcuring

    More power is not always better

    Increasing light intensity without control can amplify overcuring effects.

    Observed behavior

    Loss of fine detail, dimensional overgrowth and reduced accuracy.

    This connects with energy-driven curing behavior.

    Uniform systems are easier to calibrate

    Predictable behavior simplifies control

    When light distribution is uniform, calibration becomes more reliable.

    Implication

    Process parameters can be applied consistently across the build area.

    This supports stable process windows and controlled workflows.

    What controlled workflows require

    Uniformity + calibration

    Uniform light distribution alone is not sufficient. It must be combined with calibration.

    Engineering approach

    Measure curing response, account for spatial variation and define stable exposure conditions.

    This aligns with curing rate control.

    Uniformity defines real performance

    In resin 3D printing, uniform light distribution is more important than peak intensity.

    Consistent energy delivery enables accurate, repeatable and scalable manufacturing.

    Continue the engineering workflow

    Part of the 3Dresyns® Engineering Series

    This document is part of a framework connecting optical behavior, curing control and process stability.

    Continue reading