KIT Spinoffs in the Final of the Competition for the Deutscher Gründerpreis: Nanoscribe with High-speed 3D Printer for the Microrange/Inflatable Life Buoy RESTUBE Can Rescue Lives

May 31st, 2015

"With our 3D printers, we offer the most precise devices for microfabrication worldwide," says Nanoscribe's Managing Director Martin Hermatschweiler. Smallest 3D objects from a few hundred nanometers in size up to structures in the millimeter range can be produced with a so far unreached resolution and maximum design freedom. The printers by far exceed conventional 3D printers and are applied in a number of research areas, such as photonics, microoptics, sensor technology or medical engineering. Nanoscribe systems are characterized by various features of uniqueness that make these systems reach a new standard in microfabrication. According to the jury of the competition for the Deutscher Gründerpreis, Nanoscribe with its extremely precise and patented 3D printer represents a perfect high-tech startup and now is the technology and market leader in this area.
Water sports are very popular, but time and again, sportsmen drown in the water. They might be saved by the self-inflatable life buoys produced by RESTUBE. The rescue systems for water sports have been developed by two KIT students of mechanical engineering, Christopher Fuhrhop and Marius Kunkis. "The systems work with a self-inflatable floating unit. By pulling the trigger, drowning persons are kept above the water," the startup founders explain. At the moment, they are developing a special version for lifeguards. When the trigger is pulled, the life buoy inflates within a few seconds. The novel rescue equipment delights water sportsmen all over the world, according to the jury of the Deutscher Gründerpreis.

source: 
Nanotechnology Now