The structures you mention are metal so you would need to look at a metal printer. That is still quite expensive today, although Dr. Peter Kim at the University of Texas at El Paso is working on some printers that would only be a few $100 that can form very nice metallic structures. It is still developmental. Do you have a metallization process? You could purchase a 3D printer that prints plastic and coat it with metal. That has been done with stereolithography, but could be done with other processes as well. Stereolithography produces the smoothest surfaces, but I think in some applications the surface roughness is tolerable.
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For most 3D printers, resolution is submillimeter, although most systems claim a bit better than 100 microns. There are microstereolithography systems and direct laser writing systems with resolution less than 1 micron.
The resolution you mention on the threshold of what printers are doing today. Unfortunately, there is a big push for lower cost printers so there is less drive to push resolution limits.
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It was certainly a short interview, but it has gotten folks talking about this sort of thing.
We have not looked at fractal antenna geometries. It is definately possible, but we have not looked into it yet.
The high power stuff was nothing exotic. It was made my machining specially designed grooves into standard dielectrics sold by Emerson and Cuming, now Laird Technologies. They were monolithic and survived operating at over 2.0 GW peak power. It was pulsed power so thermal was not a problem.
We have some proof of concepts you can read about here: http://emlab.utep.edu
Diffusion of metal particles was not a problem for us due to not using metals. The voids is potentially a big problem, but our devices tended not to concentrate the field like a traditional metallic structure would so they are a bit more tolerant to voids. Still, especially if they are 3D printed, voids is a concern.
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Plenty of groups are 3D printing now and there is a lot of information on what printers people are using. For our dielectric work, we used various machines from Stratasys. For printing circuits, we use various machines from nScrypt. There are a lot of options out there.