Literature DB >> 32224513

Using chaotic advection for facile high-throughput fabrication of ordered multilayer micro- and nanostructures: continuous chaotic printing.

Carolina Chávez-Madero1, María Díaz de León-Derby, Mohamadmahdi Samandari, Carlos Fernando Ceballos-González, Edna Johana Bolívar-Monsalve, Christian Mendoza-Buenrostro, Sunshine Holmberg, Norma Alicia Garza-Flores, Mohammad Ali Almajhadi, Ivonne González-Gamboa, Juan Felipe Yee-de León, Sergio O Martínez-Chapa, Ciro A Rodríguez, Hemantha Kumar Wickramasinghe, Marc Madou, David Dean, Ali Khademhosseini, Yu Shrike Zhang, Mario Moisés Alvarez, Grissel Trujillo-de Santiago.   

Abstract

This paper introduces the concept of continuous chaotic printing, i.e. the use of chaotic flows for deterministic and continuous extrusion of fibers with internal multilayered micro- or nanostructures. Two free-flowing materials are coextruded through a printhead containing a miniaturized Kenics static mixer (KSM) composed of multiple helicoidal elements. This produces a fiber with a well-defined internal multilayer microarchitecture at high-throughput (>1.0 m min-1). The number of mixing elements and the printhead diameter determine the number and thickness of the internal lamellae, which are generated according to successive bifurcations that yield a vast amount of inter-material surface area (∼102 cm2 cm-3) at high resolution (∼10 µm). This creates structures with extremely high surface area to volume ratio (SAV). Comparison of experimental and computational results demonstrates that continuous chaotic 3D printing is a robust process with predictable output. In an exciting new development, we demonstrate a method for scaling down these microstructures by 3 orders of magnitude, to the nanoscale level (∼150 nm), by feeding the output of a continuous chaotic 3D printhead into an electrospinner. The simplicity and high resolution of continuous chaotic printing strongly supports its potential use in novel applications, including-but not limited to-bioprinting of multi-scale layered biological structures such as bacterial communities, living tissues composed of organized multiple mammalian cell types, and fabrication of smart multi-material and multilayered constructs for biomedical applications.

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Year:  2020        PMID: 32224513     DOI: 10.1088/1758-5090/ab84cc

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Biofabrication        ISSN: 1758-5082            Impact factor:   9.954


  7 in total

Review 1.  Bioinks and Bioprinting Strategies for Skeletal Muscle Tissue Engineering.

Authors:  Mohamadmahdi Samandari; Jacob Quint; Alejandra Rodríguez-delaRosa; Indranil Sinha; Olivier Pourquié; Ali Tamayol
Journal:  Adv Mater       Date:  2022-02-03       Impact factor: 30.849

2.  Colloidal multiscale porous adhesive (bio)inks facilitate scaffold integration.

Authors:  Azadeh Mostafavi; Mohamadmahdi Samandari; Mehran Karvar; Mahsa Ghovvati; Yori Endo; Indranil Sinha; Nasim Annabi; Ali Tamayol
Journal:  Appl Phys Rev       Date:  2021-12       Impact factor: 19.162

Review 3.  Microfluidics-enabled functional 3D printing.

Authors:  H Mea; J Wan
Journal:  Biomicrofluidics       Date:  2022-03-03       Impact factor: 2.800

4.  Bacterial Growth, Communication, and Guided Chemotaxis in 3D-Bioprinted Hydrogel Environments.

Authors:  Julia Müller; Anna C Jäkel; Jonathan Richter; Markus Eder; Elisabeth Falgenhauer; Friedrich C Simmel
Journal:  ACS Appl Mater Interfaces       Date:  2022-03-29       Impact factor: 10.383

Review 5.  Emerging Technologies in Multi-Material Bioprinting.

Authors:  Hossein Ravanbakhsh; Vahid Karamzadeh; Guangyu Bao; Luc Mongeau; David Juncker; Yu Shrike Zhang
Journal:  Adv Mater       Date:  2021-10-01       Impact factor: 32.086

6.  Controlling cellular organization in bioprinting through designed 3D microcompartmentalization.

Authors:  Mohamadmahdi Samandari; Fatemeh Alipanah; Keivan Majidzadeh-A; Mario M Alvarez; Grissel Trujillo-de Santiago; Ali Tamayol
Journal:  Appl Phys Rev       Date:  2021-06       Impact factor: 19.162

7.  Bioinks for 3D Bioprinting: A Scientometric Analysis of Two Decades of Progress.

Authors:  Sara Cristina Pedroza-González; Marisela Rodriguez-Salvador; Baruc Emet Pérez-Benítez; Mario Moisés Alvarez; Grissel Trujillo-de Santiago
Journal:  Int J Bioprint       Date:  2021-04-20
  7 in total

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