| Literature DB >> 32435165 |
Alina Ghilan1, Aurica P Chiriac1, Loredana E Nita1, Alina G Rusu1, Iordana Neamtu1, Vlad Mihai Chiriac2.
Abstract
Entities:
Keywords: Additive manufacturing; Bioinks; Biomaterials; Bioprinting; Machine learning; Medicine; Polymer
Year: 2020 PMID: 32435165 PMCID: PMC7224028 DOI: 10.1007/s10924-020-01722-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Polym Environ ISSN: 1566-2543 Impact factor: 3.667
Fig. 1Schematic illustration showing the AM process flow and evolution over the years
Fig. 2Schematic illustration showing the main differences between 3D (bio)printing and 4D (bio)printing
Fig. 33D bioplotting of alginate hydrogels: a cultivated Schwann cells mixed with alginate hydrogel and then bioplotted, b cell-incorporated alginate scaffold and staining result showing one strand, and c poor printability of 0.5% alginate printed with a 100-µm needle and staining result of cell-incorporated gel [50]
Fig. 4Stent configurations: a Stent cell geometries employed; b Stent material/layers used [88]
Polymer composites used in 3D printing
| Reinforcing materials | Polymer matrix | Manufacturing method | Achievements | Applications | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Particle reinforced composites | |||||
| Carbohydrate particles | PLA | Fused deposition modelling | Improved bone regeneration capacity | Bone regeneration | [ |
| Hydroxy apatite | PCL | Extrusion | Improved compressive modulus, enhanced cell proliferation and biomimetic mineralization | Bone regeneration | [ |
| Silica particles | PCL | 3D melt printing | Improved tensile properties, high hydrophilicity, good water uptake ability and osteogenic differentiation | Bone regeneration | [ |
| Strontium-containing hydroxy apatite | PCL | 3D blend printing | Promote osteogenesis repair | Bone regeneration | [ |
| Fibre reinforced composites | |||||
| Carbon fiber | Polyether-ether-ketone | Fused deposition modelling | Improved mechanical properties | Orthopaedic and dental applications | [ |
| Mesoporous bioglass fibers of magnesium calcium silicate | Gliadin and PCL | Extrusion | Improved compressive strength, in vitro degradability and stimulated new bone formation | Tissue engineering | [ |
| Nanocomposites | |||||
| Montmorillonite | Carboxy methyl cellulose/sodium alginate hydrogel | Extrusion | Improved printability and shape fidelity | Tissue engineering | [ |
| Titanium dioxide nanoparticle/β tricalcium phosphate | Alginate/gelatine hydrogel | Microextrusion | Enhanced mechanical properties | Tissue engineering | [ |
| Hydroxy apatite nanopowder/magnesium fluoride nanoparticles | PCL | Extrusion | Improved stiffness and toughness, increased osteogenic capacity | Bone regeneration | [ |
| Laponite/multi-walled carbon nanotubes | N-isopropyl acrylamide (NIPAM) | Extrusion | Improved mechanical properties and electrical conductivity, rapid self-healing, good cytocompatibility and high sensitivity to NIR light and temperature | Stimuli responsive electrical devices | [ |
| Laponite XLG | 2-Hydroxy ethyl methacrylate (HEMA) hydrogels | Direct-ink writing | Enhanced cellular attachment | Tissue engineering | [ |
| PEG/PCL nanoparticles | Gelatine-methacryloyl | Digital light processing printing | Sustained release of drugs by targeting Hippo pathway | Peripheral nerve repair | [ |
| Gold nanoparticles | Gelatine Methacrylate Hydrogel | Extrusion | Improved cytocompatibility and enhanced visibility for μCT imaging | Tissue engineering | [ |
| Magnetic nanoparticles: ferucarbotran and EFH3 | E-shell600 clear and ABS 3SP tough | Direct light projection technology | Improved printability, suitable for calibration purposes and defined magnet0ic signaling | Magnetic particle imaging phantoms | [ |
| Silica nanoparticles | Poly (ethylene glycol) diacrylate (PEGDA) | Stereo-lithography | Increased tensile and compression strengths | Microfluidic devices | [ |
| ZnO nanofibers | PLA | Solvent-cast printing | Increased crystallinity | Medical and packaging applications | [ |
| Cellulose nanofibers | Waterborne polyurethane (PU) | Fused deposition modeling | Improved mechanical properties and viscosity, good shear thinning characteristics and rapid degradation | Tissue engineering | [ |
Fig. 53D printed objects fabricated using different AM techniques: a PCL/PEG polyblend scaffold for bone regeneration; [94] b PCL, PVAc and hydroxyapatite composite porous scaffolds employing bone regeneration; [96] c 3D printed nose based on a alginate–chitosan complex hydrogel; [59] d native anatomic and axisymmetric aortic valve geometries printed with PEG-diacrylate hydrogels; [145] e various 3D anatomical geometries based on PEG–alginate–nanoclay hydrogels; [146] f PEG hydrogel microspheres as bilding blocks for 3D printed scaffolds; [115] g vascular structures based on alginate; [147] h 3D-printed artificial trachea scaffolds based on PCL; [148] i 3D printed anterior cruciate ligament screw from PLA-magnesium-α-tocopherol; [149] j 3D scanned models of wrist splints based on PLA; [150]. Reproduced with permission
Fig. 6Dual-shape change tubes. a Schematic of the basic anatomy of the coral polyp; the image was created based on encyclopedic depictions of the polyp.50 b, c CAD model and image of a 3D printed and photocured tube with cylindrical base and three fingers. d–g Optical snapshots of shape change of the tube at different temperatures. The tube was suspended over a part placed in a tank. When water was added to the tank, the tube shows uniaxial elongation and gripping of the part. Upon heating to 50 °C, the tube shortened and the fingers opened to release the part back to the bottom of the tank. Scale bars are 1 cm [159]
Fig. 7Examples of the fabricated self-folding tubes (from right to left): schematic illustrations and representative microscope images of single tubes with/without printed cells formed through the described 4D biofabrication process; photograph of a glass vial containing a large number of self-folded tubes, indicating on the possibility of their large-scale production [7]
Fig. 8The core concepts of AM and ML
(adapted from Felix W. Baumann et al. [211])
Fig. 9The relationship between ML and AM processes.
(adapted from Felix W. Baumann et al. [211])