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DLP Anti Aliasing (AA) and Blur in resin 3D-printing

Several 3D-printing techniques like SLA, MSLA and DLP are used to cure photosensitive resin layer by layer and form a 3D-printed object. To get a 3D-printed part, a DLP printer uses a DMD chip to expose the right pixels in each layer. Every seperate pixel can be turned-on or turned-off individually. At the pixels that are turned on, the light-source will expose the resin where it gets cured exactely on that pixel. The pixels that are turned-off, will not let the light through and resin will not get cured. A perfect print will therefore always have a pixelated surface when looking at the surface from up-close. The pixilation can be reduced with new exposure techniques like Anti-Aliasing (AA) and blur. However, when using it wrong, it can reduce dimensional accuracy or give a bad surface finish. We have performed a big study on Anti-Aliasing an Blur settings in an open MSLA printer and the techniques are quite similar to DLP, full study can be found in the link.

 

Image by formlabs: Pixels in DLP projectors, compared to their laser technology. A DLP uses a digital projector to project individual images of each layer at once across the entire platform. Since the image of each layer is displayed digitally, it is composed of many square pixels.

 

What is Anti-Aliasing (AA) and Blur?

There is a lot of information online available. For instance by software developer Chitubox. As not all information is clear, we decided to perform our own test and publish the results it in the article in the link. A lot of the theory is based on the study performed by the Autodesk Ember team years ago. The Autodesk Ember team studied how a single voxel is made and how grayscale works. They lined the pixels up from dark gray (nearly pure black) to pure white to cure a resin. Their study shows that when a gray level is below a certain value, there would be no reaction (curing) as the energy to cure the resin is too low. However, from dark gray to a certain critical brightness a semi-circular cured parts started to be formed in the exposed area. They found that the gray pixel (semi-circular cured voxel) would merge into adjacent (fully cured) voxels. By controlling the brightness of the pixel, any size of voxel can be produced and sub-pixel accuracy can be achieved (in theory). Learn more about the Autodesk test and theory in the video below.

 

Companies with closed DLP systems like EnvisionTEC / ETEC have been working with this and similar pixel manipulation tools for a long time to achieve higher resolution prints. Only recently it has been integrated in open resin 3D-printers and it is worth to read the results before entering random values in your slicer.

 

Test set-up for Anti-Aliasing (AA) and Blur with Liqcreate resins.

In our study we selected a fully open resin 3D-printer, the Elegoo Mars 3 in combination with Liqcreate Clear Impact. 50 micron settings were used in every test according to the setting database. Both the Chitubox software (free version) and the Elegoo Mars 3 firmware were updated to its latest version (Chitubox V1.9.1 and Mars 3 firmware V4.5.0-1.0-e13_LCDE1_4098X2560_F21.28). Chitubox has two settings that can be set for the Mars 3. First is Anti-Aliasing (AA) which can be switched off, or set to a number between gray level 0 and 8. Additionally, the level of Blur can be switched off, or set between factor 2 or 4. See the complete study here.

 

How does Anti-Aliasing and Blur work for resin 3D-printing in DLP?

Pixelated surfaces are most visible on curved areas of your part. To show this, a 50mm tall half sphere was designed and sliced and the pixels are clearly visible after slicing.

Image: Half sphere and cross-section halfway the sphere.

 

Let’s see what kind of images are generated in Chitubox when playing with the Anti-aliasing (AA) and blur settings. Original sliced image when switching off AA and blur looks like this. The image is made up from pure black and white pixels. If the print settings are perfectly dialed in, you will find a very nicely and pixilated surface.

Image: Pure black and white pixels when switching off AA and blur.

 

When switching off AA and Blur, a spherical shape will look pixilated like the image below.

Image: The slicer will calculate pixels for each layer and the outcome is a pixilated surface, especially visible for spherical shapes.

 

This surface can be manipulated with Anti-Aliasing (Greyscale) and blur settings when using it right for DLP and MSLA resin printers. In the image below you can see what grayscale does when the Anti-Aliasing option is selected. G0 means Gray level 0 (this is the lowest gray level) and a higher number means a higher Grey level. In the images it is visible that the outer edges gets an extra layers of gray pixels. Until Gray level 2 the amount of gray shades increases, while from Gray level 3 and up only the intensity of the pixel is more bright. All the pixels are black and white again at Grey level 8, which is quite useless. In all cases the blur function is turned off.

Grey and blur grayscale pixels resin 3D-printing Elegoo Mars Saturn Anti-Aliasing Anti Aliasing blur aa resin AA

Let’s see how the blur function works. In this example the anti-aliasing (AA) option is enabled on Grey level 0 and the blur function is changed from Blur off on the left to Blur 4 on the right.

blur aa resin

Image: example of sliced file were the anti-aliasing (AA) option is enabled on Grey level 0. The level of blur changed from Blur off on the left to Blur 4  on the right.

 

As seen in the previous test, the grey level function will manipulate the gray scale of the outer pixel only. The blur function will manipulate how many outer layers will be influenced by gray scale. It should be noted that a in high level of blur, the grayscale starts to render inward at the same time, resulting in the original white pixels in the central area becoming gray. This may cause insufficient light power and may lead to problems with curing. When selecting image blur level, be careful when selecting higher levels.

 

Anti-Aliasing in practice with resin 3D-printing

18 different configurations were tested in our previous study with a total printing time of over 144 of hours. We sliced the half spheres at 50 micron layer thickness with a wide range of different AA and blur settings, starting with the reference. When Anti-aliasing is switched-off, a pixelated surface is visible. We found that the best settings for this printer/resin combination was a AA setting of 3 in combination with a Blur level of 2. Find the complete study here.

Grey grayscale pixels resin 3D-printing Elegoo Mars nti-Aliasing Anti Aliasing AA dlp anti aliasing blur aa resin

Image: Anti-aliasing at level 3 and blur at level 2 (AA3;B2). Left the 3D-printed part, right the cross section of a sliced layer in the middle of the part.

 

Conclusion on Anti-Aliasing (AA) and Blur

AA and Blur can help reduce the pixilation of resin 3D-printed parts. It should be investigated per resin and application what the best setting is. The best accuracy is obtained by switching Anti-Aliasing (AA) and blur off, but pixels will be visible when the resin is dialed in properly.

Although our tests were based on an MSLA printer, a similar outcome is expected for DLP printers. When it is required to reduce the pixilation, it is always good to stay at a Grey level between 0 and 4 and either switch blur off, or use at maximum level 2 blur. The surface will have less defined pixels when using Anti-Aliasing and blur, and some other minor defects like stripes of a fuzzy surface can appear. A good starting point would be with an Anti-Aliasing (Greyscale) level of 3 in combination with Blur level 2. Some minor detailed (at pixel level) are washed out together with the pixels. If this is acceptable for your application, then it is an option to work with Anti-Aliasing and Blur settings.

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