Dental 3D Printing Education Centre
Learn How to Successfully Introduce 3D Printing Into Your Clinic or Lab
Learn How to Successfully Introduce 3D Printing Into Your Clinic or Lab
Dental 3D printing is no longer experimental technology. It is now a predictable, repeatable workflow used daily by dental clinics and laboratories to improve turnaround times, reduce outsourcing, and increase treatment control.
The key difference between clinics that struggle and clinics that succeed with 3D printing is not the printer it is understanding the workflow.
Once you understand the process from scan to finished appliance, dental printing becomes straightforward and reliable.
This education centre has been created to guide clinics and labs step-by-step through adopting 3D printing in a practical way. Each section below focuses on a specific part of the workflow so you can learn at your own pace and implement confidently.
New to Dental 3D Printing?
If you want to first understand how 3D printing fits into modern dentistry, what it is used for, and why clinics and labs are adopting it, start with the overview guide.
→ Dental 3D Printing General Information
Start Here: Understanding the Workflow
If you are completely new to dental 3D printing, begin with this guide.
It explains the full process from scanning to finished appliance so you
understand how everything connects together.
→ Getting Started with Dental 3D Printing in Your Clinic
Learn:
• What equipment is required
• The real day-to-day workflow in clinics and labs
• How predictable results are achieved
• What staff actually need to do
Choosing the Right Equipment
Not all dental printers operate the same way. The correct machine depends on accuracy requirements, production volume, and the type of work being produced chairside or labside.
This guide explains what specifications actually matter and which ones don’t.
→ How to Choose the Right Dental 3D Printer
Learn:
• Accuracy vs resolution explained simply
• Clinic vs laboratory requirements
• Production capacity considerations
• Long-term reliability factors
Clinical Workflows and Applications
Once a clinic understands the workflow and equipment, the next step is learning how common dental applications are produced. These practical walkthroughs show real production processes used daily in dentistry.
→ How to 3D Print a Dental Model for Thermoformed Clear Aligners
Learn:
• Model preparation and setup
• Printing considerations
• Post-processing steps
• Preparing appliances
(More application guides will continue to be added here)
Understanding Materials
Dental resins behave differently depending on their purpose. Using the correct material and processing it correctly is essential for predictable results.
This section explains what materials are used and when.
→ Dental Materials Explained (Coming Soon)
Learn:
• Model resins vs appliance resins
• Mechanical vs aesthetic materials
• Cleaning and curing requirements
• Material selection basics
Explore Professional Dental Printing Solutions
If you are specifically researching validated dental production equipment, you can view the dedicated dental printing range below.
→ View the Phrozen Dental Range
How to Use This Learning Centre
You do not need to learn everything at once.
- Start with the workflow overview
- Understand the equipment requirements
- Learn one clinical application
- Then expand into additional workflows
Clinics that follow this approach consistently achieve the most reliable results when introducing 3D printing into daily dentistry.