Overview of 3D printing tech

3D printing, or additive manufacturing, includes several distinct technologies — each with unique mechanisms, materials, strengths, and limitations. Choosing the right method depends on your specific application: prototyping, production, precision, cost, or material performance. Below are the core 3D printing methods used in today’s industry, research, and education.

  1. SLS uses a high-powered laser to fuse particles of powdered material (usually nylon) together, building the part within a bed of powder.
  2. FDM is the most widely adopted 3D printing method, especially for entry-level and prototyping use. It works by extruding a thermoplastic filament through a heated nozzle, depositing material layer by layer onto a build plate.
  3. SLA, and related resin-based methods like DLP and MSLA, use light (typically UV lasers or LCD screens) to cure liquid photopolymer resin layer by layer.
  4. MJF (Multi Jet Fusion) is a powder-based technology from HP that offers faster print speeds and better surface quality than SLS.
  5. DLP is a resin-based 3D printing method similar to SLA, but instead of tracing each layer with a laser, it uses a digital light projector to cure an entire layer simultaneously. This makes it significantly faster for small to medium-sized prints.
  6. DMLS / SLM are metal 3D printing methods that use lasers to create fully dense, high-strength metal parts.
  7. Binder Jetting builds objects by depositing a liquid binder onto a powder bed, suitable for metals, ceramics, and sand-based applications.
  8. Material Jetting works by depositing tiny droplets of material layer by layer, which are then cured with UV light. It’s conceptually similar to 2D inkjet printing, but in three dimensions and with functional materials.
  9. PolyJet is a type of material jetting technology developed by Stratasys. It sprays multiple photopolymer materials onto the build platform and cures them with UV light, allowing for multi-material and multi-color parts in a single print.

Choosing the right method

Each 3D printing method serves a different purpose. Some excel at detail, others at strength or scalability. Understanding these core processes is essential for making informed decisions — whether you’re printing a prototype, a production-grade part, or a functional tool.

The best method is the one that aligns with your performance needs, material requirements, and budget — and this overview is your first step toward finding it.

Compare the most popular methods.

ParameterFused Deposition ModelingStereolitographySelective Laser SinteringSelective Laser Melting
AbbreviationFDMSLASLSSLM
Operation principleExtrusion of melted filamentUV curingLaser sinteringLaser melting
Material printedThermoplastic polymer in the form of string (filament) i.e. PLA, ABSResins/photocurable liquid materialsPowdered sinterable polymers (i.e polyamides, TPU, TPE)Various metal alloys
Advantageslow costfast printing timehigh print resolutionhigh process automatizationno support structurequality prototypingmovable partsprintouts durability
Disadvantagesneed of support structuresthermal shrinkage of filamentnarrow material varietyhigh maintenance costslong printing timehigh cost
Applicationsfast prototypingeducationlow volume productioncomplex internal geometry prototypesdental modelseducationfunctional prototypesmedical modelsprototyping moveable partsautomotive and aviation industryfunctional parts
Layer thickness0.1 – 0.3 mm0.05 – 0.15 mm0.060 – 0.15 mm0.02 – 0.1 mm
Printing without support structuresnonot always necessaryyesnot always necessary
Printing objects with movable partsnot always achievable (lower precision)noyesno

Explore also

  1. What is SLS printing?
  2. What is FDM 3D printing?
  3. What is SLA 3D printing?

Related categories

Gears and conveyor icon. Represents the end-to-end workflow of the 3D printing process from file to part.

3D printing process

Icon showing material containers. Refers to types of filaments and powders used in additive manufacturing.

Materials for 3D printing

3D block structure icon. Emphasizes CAD principles and best practices for designing printable objects.

Design for 3D printing