| Literature DB >> 32935540 |
Tanya Gupta1,2, Evgheni Strelcov1,2, Glenn Holland1, Joshua Schumacher1, Yang Yang1, Mandy B Esch1, Vladimir Aksyuk1, Patrick Zeller3, Matteo Amati3, Luca Gregoratti3, Andrei Kolmakov1.
Abstract
Multiphoton polymer cross-linking evolves as the core process behind high-resolution additive microfabrication with soft materials for implantable/wearable electronics, tissue engineering, microrobotics, biosensing, drug delivery, etc. Electrons and soft X-rays, in principle, can offer even higher resolution and printing rates. However, these powerful lithographic tools are difficult to apply to vacuum incompatible liquid precursor solutions used in continuous additive fabrication. In this work, using biocompatible hydrogel as a model soft material, we demonstrate high-resolution in-liquid polymer cross-linking using scanning electron and X-ray microscopes. The approach augments the existing solid-state electron/X-ray lithography and beam-induced deposition techniques with a wider class of possible chemical reactions, precursors, and functionalities. We discuss the focused beam cross-linking mechanism, the factors affecting the ultimate feature size, and layer-by-layer printing possibilities. The potential of this technology is demonstrated on a few practically important applications such as in-liquid encapsulation of nanoparticles for plasmonic sensing and interfacing of viable cells with hydrogel electrodes.Entities:
Keywords: 3D hydrogel printing; X-ray-induced cross-linking; electron beam-induced cross-linking; gel electronics; tissue engineering
Year: 2020 PMID: 32935540 DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.0c04266
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ACS Nano ISSN: 1936-0851 Impact factor: 15.881