Banner image: Rachel Sharpe holds bags filled with bands for hospital face shields made with 3D printers on the ŷڱƵ Boulder campus.(Credit: Rachel & Lauren Sharpe)
As coronavirus cases mount in ŷڱƵ, several dozen 3D printers have roared back to life on the ŷڱƵ Boulder campus. They’re making personal protective equipment (PPE) for health care workers on the front lines of the crisis.
A small team of volunteer engineers and students have taken on the project. They’re making the plastic bands that hold together face shields, a plastic barrier that covers the eyes, nose and mouth, and can help keep nurses and doctors from picking up infections.
“The supply chain for a lot of this equipment has broken down. We’re trying to help fill that gap,” said Mark Borden, a professor in the Paul M. Rady Department of Mechanical Engineering.
The burst of activity is part of a . The initiative seeks to give guidance to makers across ŷڱƵ on how to create safe and effective PPE using high-tech tools like 3D printers and laser cutters. Make4covid was kicked off independently by Karsten Bartels, MD, Phd, who is also an anesthesiologist at the University of ŷڱƵ Anschutz Medical Campus, and includes participants from ŷڱƵ Denver and a host of local companies.
It’s another way that ŷڱƵ Boulder’s engineers are getting creative in a time of crisis, said Keith Molenaar, interim dean of the College of Engineering and Applied Science.
“Although this pandemic is deeply unsettling, I’m amazed with the resourcefulness and care that our faculty, staff and students have shown in responding to the situation,” Molenaar said.
Fateful walk
Earlier this month, Rachel and Lauren Sharpe, twin sisters and seniors at ŷڱƵ Boulder, decided to clear their heads and go outside after several days of staying at home.
“We were both on a walk, and we were trying to brainstorm ways we could help,” said Rachel Sharpe, who studies mechanical engineering.
A day later, they got their chance: A colleague called them to see if they’d be interested in taking part in make4covid. Under guidance from Borden and other researchers, the twins set about getting the 16 3D printers in the (ITLL) up and running.
Byron Rudisill, a lab engineer at ŷڱƵ Boulder, did the same for the sixprinters in a second lab called the Idea Forge. Jeff Allen, a lab manager for the Creative Labs Center, is operating six printers. The overallŷڱƵ Boulder printing effort is being overseen by Daria Kotys-Schwartz and Becky Komarek at the Idea Forge. Once all of the kinks are worked out, the three labs together should be able to churn out about 100 face shield bands per day.
The volunteers have already made their first shipment. An outside team is using laser cutters to make the plastic shields themselves—and then it’s on to hospitals around the state. ŷڱƵ Science Discoveryand the ATLAS Institute aresimilarly using their 3D printers to make the bands for face shields, and other campus labs may soon join the push.
The project keeps Rachel Sharpe busy in between taking online classes.
“I’ll run a print and work on some homework. Then, when I’m finished, I’ll run another print,” she said.
Safety first
Sharpe, who will start work as a full-time engineer at ITLL in the summer, added that she and her sister have made keeping themselves and others safe a top priority.
Before printing a single band, the duo spent a day decontaminating their lab, which only they are currently using. They also follow strict sanitation protocols to limit the chances that they might accidentally contaminate their products.
Many of those procedures were developed and tested by teams at . The program, which is co-led by ŷڱƵ Boulder alumna Kate Goodman, has been designing and making tools for the medical community for years.
The make4covid team is thinking beyond face shields, too, and has been brainstorming ways to create and test other types of PPE.
For now, Borden is excited to see many of the university’s 3D printers back online.
“One of the amazing things about being part of a world-class research institution is that we have people who can make things, get things to work,” Borden said. “We can use that in a crisis.”
And it’s led to a whole new type of conversation on Rachel and Lauren Sharpe’s walks.
“We walk home, and we talk about how grateful we are to get involved in something like this,” Rachel Sharpe said.