| Literature DB >> 33842445 |
Yuting Lv1,2, Binghao Wang1, Guohao Liu1, Yujin Tang3, Eryi Lu4, Kegong Xie3, Changgong Lan3, Jia Liu3, Zhenbo Qin5, Liqiang Wang2.
Abstract
Design an implant similar to the human bone is one of the critical problems in bone tissue engineering. Metal porous scaffolds have good prospects in bone tissue replacement due to their matching elastic modulus, better strength, and biocompatibility. However, traditional processing methods are challenging to fabricate scaffolds with a porous structure, limiting the development of porous scaffolds. With the advancement of additive manufacturing (AM) and computer-aided technologies, the development of porous metal scaffolds also ushers in unprecedented opportunities. In recent years, many new metal materials and innovative design methods are used to fabricate porous scaffolds with excellent mechanical properties and biocompatibility. This article reviews the research progress of porous metal scaffolds, and introduces the AM technologies used in porous metal scaffolds. Then the applications of different metal materials in bone scaffolds are summarized, and the advantages and limitations of various scaffold design methods are discussed. Finally, we look forward to the development prospects of AM in porous metal scaffolds.Entities:
Keywords: additive manufacturing; bone tissue engineering; design; metal material; porous scaffold
Year: 2021 PMID: 33842445 PMCID: PMC8033174 DOI: 10.3389/fbioe.2021.641130
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Bioeng Biotechnol ISSN: 2296-4185
Summaries of four different additive manufacturing technologies: selective laser sintering (SLS), selective laser melting (SLM), electron beam melting (EBM), and directional deposition technology (DED).
| Category | Materials | Application | Resolution (μm) | Advantages | Disadvantages | References |
| SLS | Polymers Metals Alloys | • Biomedical fabrication | 76–100 | • Superior mechanical properties | • Low energy efficiency | |
| SLM | Metals Alloys | • Biomedical fabrication | 80–250 | • Superior mechanical properties | Expensive | |
| EBM | Metals Alloys | • Biomedical fabrication | 50–100 | • Superior mechanical properties | Expensive | |
| DED | Metals Alloys Ceramics Glass Polymers | • Aerospace | 250 | Good mechanical properties | Low resolution |
FIGURE 1Schematic diagrams of PBF including (A) SLS and SLM, and (B) EBM (Ataee et al., 2017).
Mechanical properties of different porous metal scaffolds.
| Mechanical properties of porous metal scaffolds | |||
| Materials(structure) | Elastic modulus (GPa) | Yield strength (MPa) | References |
| Ti-6Al-4V (Gyroid and Diamond) | 3.8 | 152.6 145.7 | |
| Ti-6Al-4V (Octahedral) | 2.1–4.7 | 71–190 | |
| Pure Ti (Diamond) | 0.557–0.661 | 50 | |
| Pure Ti (FGPS) | 0.28–0.59 | 3.79–17.75 | |
| Pure Ta (Diamond) | 3.1 | 393.62 | |
| Pure Ta (Dodecahedron) | 1.22 | 12.7 | |
| Ti-30Nb-5Ta-8Zr (Rhombic dodecahedron, Body diagonals) | 0.7–4.4 | 12.5–67 | |
| Ti35Zr28Nb (Face centered cubic) | 1.1 | 27 | |
| Ti-35Nb-2Ta-3Zr | 3.1 3.5 3.9 | 136 137 149 | |
| CoCr F75 (Diamond) | 3.43 2.32 2.22 | 116.34 75.97 78.57 | |
| NiTi (Octahedron, Cellular gyroid, Sheet gyroid) | 21 29 44 | ||
| NiTi | 3.7–13.5 | ||
| 316L (Gyroid) | 2.04 2.48 2.71 | 55 72.1 89.4 | |
| 316L (Gyroid) | 14.41–15.53 | 251–302 | |
| Fe (Diamond) | 2.81 0.89 1.77 1.75 | 53.1 10.7 32.9 30.5 | |
| Fe-35Mn (Schwarz Primitive) | 33.5 | 304 | |
| Zn (Diamond) | 0.786 | 10.8 | |
| Mg WE43 (Diamond) | 0.7–0.8 | 23 | |
FIGURE 2(A) The morphologies of samples after in vitro immersion tests (Li et al., 2020b). (B) Functionally graded structure of porous Fe scaffolds. (C) The weight of S0.2 and Dense-out for 28 days. (D) The flow distributions in S0.2 and Dense-out according to CFD modeling (Li et al., 2019b).
FIGURE 3Basic structural unit: p: aperture, t: pillar thickness (Arabnejad et al., 2016).
FIGURE 4Structures designed by different design methods.
Common minimal surface structures.
FIGURE 5CT image modeling process (Podshivalov et al., 2013).
Comparison of porous scaffold design methods.