Before diving into the latest features, a quick reminder of what makes Spherene different.
At the core of Spherene lies Adaptive Density Minimal Surfaces (ADMS) a patented geometry that continuously adapts its cell size and thickness across a part. ADMS supports smooth, continuous transitions without abrupt changes, enabling better mechanical control, surface conformity, and multifunctional performance.
In short:
Building on this foundation, Spherene introduces a new generation of features designed to unlock controlled anisotropy and high-performance fluid applications.
New Feature 1: Scatter Vector - Introducing Controlled Anisotropy
ADMS is intrinsically close to isotropic by design. But real-world engineering problems are not always isotropic.
Scatter Vector gives users direct control over local geometric stretching through vector fields. Instead of uniform behavior in all directions, the geometry can now be intentionally biased.
How it works
Applying scatter vectors allows ADMS to transition from near-isotropic to purposefully anisotropic behavior.
This feature enables:
Scatter Vector expands ADMS from a passive adaptive geometry into an actively guided structural system.
New Feature 2: Flow ADMS - Minimal Surfaces Optimized for Fluid Performance
While traditional ADMS and TPMS excel mechanically, fluid applications introduce two fundamental challenges:
FlowADMS is a new geometry specifically designed to address these limitations.
What’s different about Flow ADMS
Despite its flow-oriented shape, Flow ADMS remains near-isotropic, maintaining the mechanical advantages of ADMS while radically improving fluid behavior.
The result
Flow ADMS enables ADMS-based designs to move confidently into heat exchangers, cooling systems, and other fluid-driven applications.
Above: Our new flow geometry in a heat exchanger
New Feature 3: Flow Direction - Defined Flow Paths
FlowADMS solves the baseline fluid challenges. FlowDirection takes optimization a step further.
This advanced feature allows users to define preferred flow paths via vector fields.
How it works
The geometry automatically adapts to follow the prescribed flow paths, introducing intentional anisotropy for fluid performance.
Proven performance gains
In a heat exchanger comparison against a TPMS gyroid:
With CFD-driven vector fields, even greater reductions in fluid resistance are expected.
Flow Direction transforms Flow ADMS from an optimized geometry into a design-driven flow system.
Beyond fluid applications, we are also looking forward to exploring how flow direction can introduce anisotropy into geometry, enabling better guidance of stress distribution and achieving longer lifetimes under mechanical loading.
Additional Improvements: Faster, Smarter, Safer Parametrization
Beyond new geometric capabilities, Spherene continues to improve everyday usability and reliability.
Improved guidance for realistic parametrization
Faster error feedback
These improvements help users reach valid, manufacturable designs faster, especially when working with advanced features like vectors and flow optimization.
Expanding Possibilities
With Scatter Vector, Flow ADMS, and Flow Direction, ADMS evolves beyond adaptive density into a platform for structural, thermal, and fluid optimization all within a single continuous geometry.
From lightweighting and energy absorption to high-efficiency heat exchange and flow control, Spherene continues to expand what minimal surfaces can do, without sacrificing mechanical integrity or design freedom.
As a Spherene user make sure you update to the V3 version by going into Spherene Portal and downloading it - Latest release 28/01/2026
Contact us for your specific use case: integrate@spherene.io
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