815 research outputs found
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Freeform Bioprinting of Liver Encapsulated in Alginate Hydrogels Tissue Constructs for Pharmacokinetic Study
An in vitro model that can be realistically and inexpensively used to predict human response to
various drug administration and toxic chemical exposure is needed. By fabricating a microscale
3D physiological tissue construct consisting of an array of channels and tissue-embedded
chambers, one can selectively develop various biomimicking mammalian tissues for a number of
pharmaceutical applications, for example, experimental pharmaceutical screening for drug
efficacy and toxicity along with apprehending the disposition and metabolic profile of a
candidate drug. This paper addresses issues relating to the development and implementation of a
bioprinting process for freeform fabrication of a 3D cell-encapsulated hydrogel-based tissue
construct, the direct integration onto a microfluidic device for pharmacokinetic study, and the
underlying engineering science for the fabrication of a 3D microscale tissue chamber as well as
its application in pharmacokinetic study. To this end, a prototype 3D microfluidic tissue chamber
embedded with liver cells encapsulated within a hydrogel matrix construct is bioprinted as a
physiological in vitro model for pharmacokinetic study. The developed fabrication processes are
further validated and parameters optimized by assessing cell viability and liver cell phenotype, in
which metabolic and synthetic liver functions are quantitated.Mechanical Engineerin
Advanced 3D cell culture techniques in micro-bioreactors, Part II: Systems and applications
In this second part of our systematic review on the research area of 3D cell culture in micro-bioreactors we give a detailed description of the published work with regard to the existing micro-bioreactor types and their applications, and highlight important results gathered with the respective systems. As an interesting detail, we found that micro-bioreactors have already been used in SARS-CoV research prior to the SARS-CoV2 pandemic. As our literature research revealed a variety of 3D cell culture configurations in the examined bioreactor systems, we defined in review part one “complexity levels” by means of the corresponding 3D cell culture techniques applied in the systems. The definition of the complexity is thereby based on the knowledge that the spatial distribution of cell-extracellular matrix interactions and the spatial distribution of homologous and heterologous cell–cell contacts play an important role in modulating cell functions. Because at least one of these parameters can be assigned to the 3D cell culture techniques discussed in the present review, we structured the studies according to the complexity levels applied in the MBR systems
Hydrogel-based logic circuits for planar microfluidics and lab-on-a-chip automation
The transport of vital nutrient supply in fluids as well as the exchange of specific chemical signals from cell to cell has been optimized over billion years of natural evolution. This model from nature is a driving factor in the field of microfluidics, which investigates the manipulation of the smallest amounts of fluid with the aim of applying these effects in fluidic microsystems for technical solutions. Currently, microfluidic systems are receiving attention, especially in diagnostics, \textit{e.g.} as SARS-CoV-2 antigen tests, or in the field of high-throughput analysis, \textit{e.g.} for cancer research.
Either simple-to-use or large-scale integrated microfluidic systems that perform biological and chemical laboratory investigations on a so called Lab-on-a-Chip (LoC) provide fast analysis, high functionality, outstanding reproducibility at low cost per sample, and small demand of reagents due to system miniaturization. Despite the great progress of different LoC technology platforms in the last 30 years, there is still a lack of standardized microfluidic components, as well as a high-performance, fully integrated on-chip automation. Quite promising for the microfluidic system design is the similarity of the Kirchhoff's laws from electronics to predict pressure and flow rate in microchannel structures. One specific LoC platform technology approach controls fluids by active polymers which respond to specific physical and chemical signals in the fluid. Analogue to (micro-)electronics, these active polymer materials can be realized by various photolithographic and micro patterning methods to generate functional elements at high scalability.
The so called chemofluidic circuits have a high-functional potential and provide “real” on-chip automation, but are complex in system design. In this work, an advanced circuit concept for the planar microfluidic chip architecture, originating from the early era of the semiconductor-based resistor-transistor-logic (RTL) will be presented. Beginning with the state of the art of microfluidic technologies, materials, and methods of this work will be further described. Then the preferred fabrication technology is evaluated and various microfluidic components are discussed in function and design. The most important component to be characterized is the hydrogel-based chemical volume phase transition transistor (CVPT) which is the key to approach microfluidic logic gate operations. This circuit concept (CVPT-RTL) is robust and simple in design, feasible with common materials and manufacturing techniques. Finally, application scenarios for the CVPT-RTL concept are presented and further development recommendations are proposed.:1 The transistor: invention of the 20th century
2 Introduction to fluidic microsystems and the theoretical basics
2.1 Fluidic systems at the microscale
2.2 Overview of microfluidic chip fabrication
2.2.1 Common substrate materials for fluidic microsystems
2.2.2 Structuring polymer substrates for microfluidics
2.2.3 Polymer chip bonding technologies
2.3 Fundamentals and microfluidic transport processes
2.3.1 Fluid dynamics in miniaturized systems
2.3.2 Hagen-Poiseuille law: the fluidic resistance
2.3.3 Electronic and microfluidic circuit model analogy
2.3.4 Limits of the electro-fluidic analogy
2.4 Active components for microfluidic control
2.4.1 Fluid transport by integrated micropumps
2.4.2 Controlling fluids by on-chip microvalves
2.4.3 Hydrogel-based microvalve archetypes
2.5 LoC technologies: lost in translation?
2.6 Microfluidic platforms providing logic operations
2.6.1 Hybrids: MEMS-based logic concepts
2.6.2 Intrinsic logic operators for microfluidic circuits
2.7 Research objective: microfluidic hydrogel-based logic circuits
3 Stimuli-responsive polymers for microfluidics
3.1 Introduction to hydrogels
3.1.1 Application variety of hydrogels
3.1.2 Hydrogel microstructuring methods
3.2 Theory: stimuli-responsive hydrogels
3.3 PNIPAAm: a multi-responsive hydrogel
4 Design, production and characterization methods of hydrogel-based microfluidic
systems
4.1 The semi-automated computer aided design approach for microfluidic systems
4.2 The applied design process
4.3 Fabrication of microfluidic chips
4.3.1 Photoresist master fabrication
4.3.2 Soft lithography for PDMS chip production
4.3.3 Assembling PDMS chips by plasma bonding
4.4 Integration of functional hydrogels in microfluidic chips
4.4.1 Preparation of a monomer solution for hydrogel synthesis
4.4.2 Integration methods
4.5 Effects on hydrogel photopolymerization and the role of integration method
4.5.1 Photopolymerization from monomer solutions: managing the diffusion of free
radicals
4.5.2 Hydrogel adhesion and UV light intensity distribution in the polymerization
chamber
4.5.3 Hydrogel shrinkage behavior of different adhesion types
4.6 Comparison of the integration methods
4.7 Characterization setups for hydrogel actuators and microfluidic measurements . 71
4.7.1 Optical characterization method to describe swelling behavior
4.7.2 Setup of a microfluidic test stand
4.8 Conclusion: design, production and characterization methods
5 VLSI technology for hydrogel-based microfluidics
5.1 Overview of photolithography methods
5.2 Standard UV photolithography system for microfluidic structures
5.3 Self-made UV lithography system suitable for the mVLSI
5.3.1 Lithography setup for the DFR and SU-8 master exposure
5.3.2 Comparison of mask-based UV induced crosslinking for DFR and SU-8
5.4 Mask-based UV photopolymerization for mVLSI hydrogel patterning
5.4.1 Lithography setup for the photopolymerization of hydrogels
5.4.2 Hydrogel photopolymerization: experiments and results
5.4.3 Troubleshooting: photopolymerization of hydrogels
5.5 Conclusion: mVLSI technologies for hydrogel-based LoCs
6 Components for chemofluidic circuit design
6.1 Passive components in microfluidics
6.1.1 Microfluidic resistor
6.1.2 Planar-passive microfluidic signal mixer
6.1.3 Phase separation: laminar flow signal splitter
6.1.4 Hydrogel-based microfluidic one-directional valves
6.2 Hydrogel-based active components
6.2.1 Reversible hydrogel-based valves
6.2.2 Hydrogel-based variable resistors
6.2.3 CVPT: the microfluidic transistor
6.3 Conclusion: components for chemofluidic circuits
7 Hydrogel-based logic circuits in planar microfluidics
7.1 Development of a planar CVPT logic concept
7.1.1 Challenges of planar microfluidics
7.1.2 Preparatory work and conceptional basis
7.2 The microfluidic CVPT-RTL concept
7.3 The CVPT-RTL NAND gate
7.3.1 Circuit optimization stabilizing the NAND operating mode
7.3.2 Role of laminar flow for the CVPT-RTL concept
7.3.3 Hydrogel-based components for improved switching reliability
7.4 One design fits all: the NOR, AND and OR gate
7.5 Control measures for cascaded systems
7.6 Application scenarios for the CVPT-RTL concept
7.6.1 Use case: automated cell growth system
7.6.2 Use case: chemofluidic converter
7.7 Conclusion: Hydrogel-based logic circuits
8 Summary and outlook
8.1 Scientific achievements
8.2 Summarized recommendations from this work
Supplementary information
SI.1 Swelling degree of BIS-pNIPAAm gels
SI.2 Simulated ray tracing of UV lithography setup by WinLens®
SI.3 Determination of the resolution using the intercept theorem
SI.4 Microfluidic master mold test structures
SI.4.1 Polymer and glass mask comparison
SI.4.2 Resolution Siemens star in DFR
SI.4.3 Resolution Siemens star in SU-8
SI.4.4 Integration test array 300 ÎĽm for DFR and SU-8
SI.4.5 Integration test array 100 ÎĽm for SU-8
SI.4.6 Microfluidic structure for different technology parameters
SI.5 Microfluidic test setups
SI.6 Supplementary information: microfluidic components
SI.6.1 Compensation methods for flow stabilization in microfluidic chips
SI.6.2 Planar-passive microfluidic signal mixer
SI.6.3 Laminar flow signal splitter
SI.6.4 Variable fluidic resistors: flow rate characteristics
SI.6.5 CVPT flow rate characteristics for high Rout
Standard operation proceduresDer Transport von lebenswichtigen Nährstoffen in Flüssigkeiten sowie der Austausch spezifischer chemischer Signale von Zelle zu Zelle wurde in Milliarden Jahren natürlicher Evolution optimiert. Dieses Vorbild aus der Natur ist ein treibender Faktor im Fachgebiet der Mikrofluidik, welches die Manipulation kleinster Flüssigkeitsmengen erforscht um diese Effekte in fluidischen Mikrosystemen für technische Lösungen zu nutzen. Derzeit finden mikrofluidische Systeme vor allem in der Diagnostik, z.B. wie SARS-CoV-2-Antigentests, oder im Bereich der Hochdurchsatzanalyse, z.B. in der Krebsforschung, besondere Beachtung.
Entweder einfach zu bedienende oder hochintegrierte mikrofluidische Systeme, die biologische und chemische Laboruntersuchungen auf einem sogenannten Lab-on-a-Chip (LoC) durchführen, bieten schnelle Analysen, hohe Funktionalität, hervorragende Reproduzierbarkeit bei niedrigen Kosten pro Probe und einen geringen Bedarf an Reagenzien durch die Miniaturisierung des Systems. Trotz des großen Fortschritts verschiedener LoC-Technologieplattformen in den letzten 30 Jahren mangelt es noch an standardisierten mikrofluidischen Komponenten sowie an einer leistungsstarken, vollintegrierten On-Chip-Automatisierung. Vielversprechend für das Design mikrofluidischer Systeme ist die Ähnlichkeit der Kirchhoff'schen Gesetze aus der Elektronik zur Vorhersage von Druck und Flussrate in Mikrokanalstrukturen. Ein spezifischer Ansatz der LoC-Plattformtechnologie steuert Flüssigkeiten durch aktive Polymere, die auf spezifische physikalische und chemische Signale in der Flüssigkeit reagieren. Analog zur (Mikro-)Elektronik können diese aktiven Polymermaterialien durch verschiedene fotolithografische und mikrostrukturelle Methoden realisiert werden, um funktionelle Elemente mit hoher Skalierbarkeit zu erzeugen.\\
Die sogenannten chemofluidischen Schaltungen haben ein hohes funktionales Potenzial und ermöglichen eine 'wirkliche' on-chip Automatisierung, sind jedoch komplex im Systemdesign. In dieser Arbeit wird ein fortgeschrittenes Schaltungskonzept für eine planare mikrofluidische Chiparchitektur vorgestellt, das aus der frühen Ära der halbleiterbasierten Resistor-Transistor-Logik (RTL) hervorgeht. Beginnend mit dem Stand der Technik der mikrofluidischen Technologien, werden Materialien und Methoden dieser Arbeit näher beschrieben. Daraufhin wird die bevorzugte Herstellungstechnologie bewertet und verschiedene mikrofluidische Komponenten werden in Funktion und Design diskutiert. Die wichtigste Komponente, die es zu charakterisieren gilt, ist der auf Hydrogel basierende chemische Volumen-Phasenübergangstransistor (CVPT), der den Schlüssel zur Realisierung mikrofluidische Logikgatteroperationen darstellt. Dieses Schaltungskonzept (CVPT-RTL) ist robust und einfach im Design und kann mit gängigen Materialien und Fertigungstechniken realisiert werden. Zuletzt werden Anwendungsszenarien für das CVPT-RTL-Konzept vorgestellt und Empfehlungen für die fortlaufende Entwicklung angestellt.:1 The transistor: invention of the 20th century
2 Introduction to fluidic microsystems and the theoretical basics
2.1 Fluidic systems at the microscale
2.2 Overview of microfluidic chip fabrication
2.2.1 Common substrate materials for fluidic microsystems
2.2.2 Structuring polymer substrates for microfluidics
2.2.3 Polymer chip bonding technologies
2.3 Fundamentals and microfluidic transport processes
2.3.1 Fluid dynamics in miniaturized systems
2.3.2 Hagen-Poiseuille law: the fluidic resistance
2.3.3 Electronic and microfluidic circuit model analogy
2.3.4 Limits of the electro-fluidic analogy
2.4 Active components for microfluidic control
2.4.1 Fluid transport by integrated micropumps
2.4.2 Controlling fluids by on-chip microvalves
2.4.3 Hydrogel-based microvalve archetypes
2.5 LoC technologies: lost in translation?
2.6 Microfluidic platforms providing logic operations
2.6.1 Hybrids: MEMS-based logic concepts
2.6.2 Intrinsic logic operators for microfluidic circuits
2.7 Research objective: microfluidic hydrogel-based logic circuits
3 Stimuli-responsive polymers for microfluidics
3.1 Introduction to hydrogels
3.1.1 Application variety of hydrogels
3.1.2 Hydrogel microstructuring methods
3.2 Theory: stimuli-responsive hydrogels
3.3 PNIPAAm: a multi-responsive hydrogel
4 Design, production and characterization methods of hydrogel-based microfluidic
systems
4.1 The semi-automated computer aided design approach for microfluidic systems
4.2 The applied design process
4.3 Fabrication of microfluidic chips
4.3.1 Photoresist master fabrication
4.3.2 Soft lithography for PDMS chip production
4.3.3 Assembling PDMS chips by plasma bonding
4.4 Integration of functional hydrogels in microfluidic chips
4.4.1 Preparation of a monomer solution for hydrogel synthesis
4.4.2 Integration methods
4.5 Effects on hydrogel photopolymerization and the role of integration method
4.5.1 Photopolymerization from monomer solutions: managing the diffusion of free
radicals
4.5.2 Hydrogel adhesion and UV light intensity distribution in the polymerization
chamber
4.5.3 Hydrogel shrinkage behavior of different adhesion types
4.6 Comparison of the integration methods
4.7 Characterization setups for hydrogel actuators and microfluidic measurements . 71
4.7.1 Optical characterization method to describe swelling behavior
4.7.2 Setup of a microfluidic test stand
4.8 Conclusion: design, production and characterization methods
5 VLSI technology for hydrogel-based microfluidics
5.1 Overview of photolithography methods
5.2 Standard UV photolithography system for microfluidic structures
5.3 Self-made UV lithography system suitable for the mVLSI
5.3.1 Lithography setup for the DFR and SU-8 master exposure
5.3.2 Comparison of mask-based UV induced crosslinking for DFR and SU-8
5.4 Mask-based UV photopolymerization for mVLSI hydrogel patterning
5.4.1 Lithography setup for the photopolymerization of hydrogels
5.4.2 Hydrogel photopolymerization: experiments and results
5.4.3 Troubleshooting: photopolymerization of hydrogels
5.5 Conclusion: mVLSI technologies for hydrogel-based LoCs
6 Components for chemofluidic circuit design
6.1 Passive components in microfluidics
6.1.1 Microfluidic resistor
6.1.2 Planar-passive microfluidic signal mixer
6.1.3 Phase separation: laminar flow signal splitter
6.1.4 Hydrogel-based microfluidic one-directional valves
6.2 Hydrogel-based active components
6.2.1 Reversible hydrogel-based valves
6.2.2 Hydrogel-based variable resistors
6.2.3 CVPT: the microfluidic transistor
6.3 Conclusion: components for chemofluidic circuits
7 Hydrogel-based logic circuits in planar microfluidics
7.1 Development of a planar CVPT logic concept
7.1.1 Challenges of planar microfluidics
7.1.2 Preparatory work and conceptional basis
7.2 The microfluidic CVPT-RTL concept
7.3 The CVPT-RTL NAND gate
7.3.1 Circuit optimization stabilizing the NAND operating mode
7.3.2 Role of laminar flow for the CVPT-RTL concept
7.3.3 Hydrogel-based components for improved switching reliability
7.4 One design fits all: the NOR, AND and OR gate
7.5 Control measures for cascaded systems
7.6 Application scenarios for the CVPT-RTL concept
7.6.1 Use case: automated cell growth system
7.6.2 Use case: chemofluidic converter
7.7 Conclusion: Hydrogel-based logic circuits
8 Summary and outlook
8.1 Scientific achievements
8.2 Summarized recommendations from this work
Supplementary information
SI.1 Swelling degree of BIS-pNIPAAm gels
SI.2 Simulated ray tracing of UV lithography setup by WinLens®
SI.3 Determination of the resolution using the intercept theorem
SI.4 Microfluidic master mold test structures
SI.4.1 Polymer and glass mask comparison
SI.4.2 Resolution Siemens star in DFR
SI.4.3 Resolution Siemens star in SU-8
SI.4.4 Integration test array 300 ÎĽm for DFR and SU-8
SI.4.5 Integration test array 100 ÎĽm for SU-8
SI.4.6 Microfluidic structure for different technology parameters
SI.5 Microfluidic test setups
SI.6 Supplementary information: microfluidic components
SI.6.1 Compensation methods for flow stabilization in microfluidic chips
SI.6.2 Planar-passive microfluidic signal mixer
SI.6.3 Laminar flow signal splitter
SI.6.4 Variable fluidic resistors: flow rate characteristics
SI.6.5 CVPT flow rate characteristics for high Rout
Standard operation procedure
Application of 3-D Printing for Tissue Regeneration in Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery: What is Upcoming?
The ultimate goal of any surgical procedure is to improve perioperative form and function and to minimize operative and postoperative morbidity. In recent years, many exciting and novel technological advances have been introduced in the field of oral and maxillofacial surgery. One example of such technology that is continuing to increase in prevalence is the use of 3-dimensional (3-D) printing techniques with special properties, which seems hopeful for practitioners in the field of regenerative medicine. Tissue engineering is a critical and important area in biomedical engineering for creating biological alternatives for grafts, implants, and prostheses. One of the main triad bases for tissue engineering is scaffolds, which play a great role for determining growth directions of stem cells in a 3-dimensional aspect. Mechanical strength of these scaffolds is critical as well as interconnected channels and controlled porosity or pores distribution. However, existing 3-D scaffolds proved less than ideal for actual clinical applications. In this chapter, we review the application and advancement of rapid prototyping (RP) techniques in the design and creation of synthetic scaffolds for use in tissue engineering. Also, we survey through new and novel merging era of “bioprinting.
MilkGuard: Predictive Modeling and Mobile App Development for Affordable, Usable Breast Milk Diagnostic
Breast milk is considered the gold standard of infant nutrition, but some infants around the world lack access to it due to maternal health complications or other considerations. Human breast milk banks do exist to try to alleviate this problem, but most are underfunded and have high operational costs, making it difficult for some infants to obtain safe, reliable donated breast milk.
Existing methods of testing breast milk are expensive, so the MilkGuard project was conceptualized in 2017 as a fast, economical, and highly usable bacterial contamination detection system. Prior to this year, previous MilkGuard teams had developed a system that was faster and more affordable than prior methods, but its main drawbacks were that it was difficult to use and that it lacked the sensitivity to detect low Escherichia coli (E. coli) contamination levels. To ameliorate these drawbacks, our goals for this year were 1) to improve MilkGuard’s sensitivity to the Human Milk Banking Association of North America’s (HMBANA) lower limit of detection standard of 104 CFU/mL, 2) to increase the ease of the assay process, and 3) to achieve these objectives in an economical and environmentally-friendly way.
Through COMSOL Multiphysics software simulations, we proved the possibility of realistically optimizing biosensor parameters on a computer. Since the simulations were virtual, we discovered an optimal biosensor configuration without the need to purchase, manufacture, and test hundreds of physical sensors. Future teams can quickly confirm these results by building a physical sensor in the lab. We also developed the MilkGuard app, which greatly simplifies the colorimetric analysis process for the user. This mobile app uses our improved color-analysis algorithm which improves detection sensitivity around the HMBANA’s lowered limit of detection standard, given the same image data to analyze. The efficacy of our new color analysis algorithm can be confirmed by future teams in the lab, and our current regression curve can be made more robust with a larger sample size.
Taken together, our developments this year have increased the usability and sensitivity of the MilkGuard system, which can improve bacterial contamination testing by milk banks and move one step closer to equitable access to safe breast milk for infants around the world
Microdevices and Microsystems for Cell Manipulation
Microfabricated devices and systems capable of micromanipulation are well-suited for the manipulation of cells. These technologies are capable of a variety of functions, including cell trapping, cell sorting, cell culturing, and cell surgery, often at single-cell or sub-cellular resolution. These functionalities are achieved through a variety of mechanisms, including mechanical, electrical, magnetic, optical, and thermal forces. The operations that these microdevices and microsystems enable are relevant to many areas of biomedical research, including tissue engineering, cellular therapeutics, drug discovery, and diagnostics. This Special Issue will highlight recent advances in the field of cellular manipulation. Technologies capable of parallel single-cell manipulation are of special interest
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Algorithmic generation of vascular network models for additive manufacturing
Fabrication of functional vascularised three-dimensional tissue constructs has been a long-standing objective in the field of tissue engineering. Currently, the main limitation in this field is the inability to produce fully vascularised tissue with an internal mass transport system (vascular network) that can provide cells with nutrients and oxygen while removing waste, to imitate the functions of human living tissue. Achieving such a system would allow the development of large-scale tissue constructs and increase the potential for in vivo integration. There are different approaches to attempt vascularisation, which use a diversity of techniques. Among these, one of the most promising is additive manufacturing due to its versatility, reproducibility, and compatibility with suitable materials. With the aim of contributing towards the efforts in this field, the present work presents a method for the automatic generation of physiologically-based vascular network structures as solid 3D models suitable for additive manufacturing technologies. Considering the natural hierarchical branching vasculature as an ideal solution, an algorithm was developed to generate branching tree structures connected at the ends to form vascular networks. The implementation is based on previous work in the field of computational bio-simulation of arterial tree growth. It consists of a space-filling algorithm that connects all given points to a growing tree within a defined three-dimensional volume, while fulfilling constraints associated with the physiological laws of circulation. The networks are generated using a CAD environment and thus can be used in additive manufacturing processes. An investigation was carried out on the effect of three input parameters (namely volumetric flow rate, pressure difference across the tree, and number of terminal points) in order to find a suitable combination of parameters that would produce networks with diameters above the fabrication threshold.
In order to demonstrate feasibility and functionality of the networks fabricated using this proposed method, two network models were produced by 3D printing and subsequently used as a sacrificial structure to produce PDMS blocks with the hollow vascular networks embedded in it. Particle tracking was used to measure the flow velocity in the channels at two different inlet flow rates. Comparisons were made with theoretical values obtained from computational fluid dynamics simulations and show a good agreement between experiment and theory. From the measurements of maximum velocity, it was observed that at a lower flow rate, the experimental values were closer to the theoretical values than at a higher flow rate. This might be due to the challenges that higher flow rates represent, such as less accurate particle tracking. Given the overall agreement, it is concluded that computational fluid dynamics simulations are a fast and effective way to analyse flow in vascular network models produced by the method here proposed.The Cambridge Trust, CONACyT (Consejo Nacional de Ciencia y Tecnologia), EPSRC Cambridge & Cranfield Doctoral Training Centre in Ultra Precisio
Optofluidic fabrication for 3D-shaped particles.
Complex three-dimensional (3D)-shaped particles could play unique roles in biotechnology, structural mechanics and self-assembly. Current methods of fabricating 3D-shaped particles such as 3D printing, injection moulding or photolithography are limited because of low-resolution, low-throughput or complicated/expensive procedures. Here, we present a novel method called optofluidic fabrication for the generation of complex 3D-shaped polymer particles based on two coupled processes: inertial flow shaping and ultraviolet (UV) light polymerization. Pillars within fluidic platforms are used to deterministically deform photosensitive precursor fluid streams. The channels are then illuminated with patterned UV light to polymerize the photosensitive fluid, creating particles with multi-scale 3D geometries. The fundamental advantages of optofluidic fabrication include high-resolution, multi-scalability, dynamic tunability, simple operation and great potential for bulk fabrication with full automation. Through different combinations of pillar configurations, flow rates and UV light patterns, an infinite set of 3D-shaped particles is available, and a variety are demonstrated
Optical Printing of Multiscale Hydrogel Structures
Hydrogel has been a promising candidate to recapitulate the chemical, physical and mechanical properties of natural extracellular matrix (ECM), and they have been widely used for tissue engineering, lab on a chip and biophotonics applications. A range of optical fabrication technologies such as photolithography, digital projection stereolithography and laser direct writing have been used to shape hydrogels into structurally complex functional devices and constructs. However, it is still greatly challenging for researchers to design and fabricate multiscale hydrogel structures using a single fabrication technology.
To address this challenge, the goal of this work is the design and develop novel multimode optical 3D printing technology capable of printing hydrogels with multiscale features ranging from centimeter to micrometer sizes and in the process transforming simple hydrogels into functional devices for many biomedical applications. Chapter 2 presents a new multimode optical printing technology that synergistically combined large-scale additive manufacturing with small-scale additive/subtractive manufacturing. This multiscale fabrication capability was used to (i) align cells using laser induced densification in Chapter 3, (ii) develop diffractive optics based on changes in refractive indices in Chapter 4, (iii) print diffractive optical elements in Chapter 5, and (iv) digitally print complex microfluidic devices and other 3D constructs in Chapter 6. Overall, this work open doors to a new world of fabrication where multiscale functional hydrogel structures are possible for a range biomedical application
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