Editorial
Uttam Sowmya
Abstract
Fixing and reusing plastics and conveying malignant growth medicates all the more adequately are just two of a large number of the potential applications another 3D/4D printing innovation may have, on account of the spearheading work of an examination coordinated effort between UNSW Sydney and The College of Auckland. The analysts have uncovered the fruitful converging of 3D/4D printing and photograph controlled/living polymerization - a compound procedure to make polymers - in a paper distributed in Angewandte Chemie Global Release on Friday. 4D printing is a subset of 3D printing where the printed item can change its shape because of specific conditions.