Patents and trademarks CLIP was, at the time the original patent was filed, an acronym for Continuous Liquid Interphase Printing, described in two patents, titled 'Continuous liquid interphase printing' and 'Method and apparatus for three-dimensional fabrication with feed through carrier'. Both patents were filed February 10, 2014, by
EiPi Systems, Inc as Applicant with the following individuals titled as 'inventors':
Joseph DeSimone, Alexander Ermoshkin, Nikita Ermoshkin, and Edward T. Samulski. According to data in the California Secretary of State's office database,
Carbon is listed as of September 6, 2014. A trademark was filed on September 10, for the 'CARBON3D' trademark.
Public release A journal article was published in
Science detailing the groups' findings. At a
TED talk in March 2015, DeSimone demonstrated a 3D-printer prototype using CLIP technology and produced a relatively complex object in less than 10 minutes, 100 times faster than other 3D printing techniques. DeSimone cited a scene in the 1992 film
Terminator 2: Judgment Day, where the
T-1000 machine reforms itself from a metallic pool, as an inspiration for the technology's development. ==See also==