1 research outputs found
3D Printing of PDMS Improves Its Mechanical and Cell Adhesion Properties
Despite
extensive use of polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) in medical
applications, such as lab-on-a-chip or tissue/organ-on-a-chip devices,
point-of-care devices, and biological machines, the manufacturing
of PDMS devices is limited to soft-lithography and its derivatives,
which prohibits the fabrication of geometrically complex shapes. With
the recent advances in three-dimensional (3D) printing, use of PDMS
for fabrication of such complex shapes has gained considerable interest.
This research presents a detailed investigation on printability of
PDMS elastomers over three concentrations for mechanical and cell
adhesion studies. The results demonstrate that 3D printing of PDMS
improved the mechanical properties of fabricated samples up to three
fold compared to that of cast ones because of the decreased porosity
of bubble entrapment. Most importantly, 3D printing facilitates the
adhesion of breast cancer cells, whereas cast samples do not allow
cellular adhesion without the use of additional coatings such as extracellular
matrix proteins. Cells are able to adhere and grow in the grooves
along the printed filaments demonstrating that 3D printed devices
can be engineered with superior cell adhesion qualities compared to
traditionally manufactured PDMS devices