Computational Design and Single-Wire Sensing of 3D Printed Objects with Integrated Capacitive Touchpoints

3D schematics of integrated capacitive touchpoints in objects

Producing interactive 3D printed objects currently requires laborious 3D design and post-instrumentation with off-the-shelf electronics. Multi-material 3D printing using conductive PLA presents opportunities to mitigate these challenges. We present a computational design pipeline that embeds multiple capacitive touchpoints into any 3D model that has a closed mesh without self-intersection. With our pipeline, users define touchpoints on the 3D object’s surface to indicate interactive regions. Our pipeline then automatically generates a conductive path to connect the touch regions. This path is optimized to output unique resistor-capacitor delays when each region is touched, resulting in all regions being able to be sensed through a double-wire or single-wire connection. We illustrate our approach’s utility with five computational and sensing performance evaluations (achieving 93.35% mean accuracy for single-wire) and six application examples. Our sensing technique supports existing uses (e.g., prototyping) and highlights the growing promise to produce interactive devices entirely with 3D printing.

Associated 91ÃÛÌÒ¸óers

Publications

S. Sandra Bae, Takanori Fujiwara, Danielle Szafir, Ellen Yi-Luen Do, Michael L. Rivera. 2025. "". In: SCF '25: Proceedings of the ACM Symposium on Computational Fabrication. (Cambridge, MA, November 19, 2025)