| Literature DB >> 35890571 |
Raffaele Pugliese1, Stefano Regondi1.
Abstract
In the last decades, 3D printing has played a crucial role as an innovative technology for tissue and organ fabrication, patient-specific orthoses, drug delivery, and surgical planning. However, biomedical materials used for 3D printing are usually static and unable to dynamically respond or transform within the internal environment of the body. These materials are fabricated ex situ, which involves first printing on a planar substrate and then deploying it to the target surface, thus resulting in a possible mismatch between the printed part and the target surfaces. The emergence of 4D printing addresses some of these drawbacks, opening an attractive path for the biomedical sector. By preprogramming smart materials, 4D printing is able to manufacture structures that dynamically respond to external stimuli. Despite these potentials, 4D printed dynamic materials are still in their infancy of development. The rise of artificial intelligence (AI) could push these technologies forward enlarging their applicability, boosting the design space of smart materials by selecting promising ones with desired architectures, properties, and functions, reducing the time to manufacturing, and allowing the in situ printing directly on target surfaces achieving high-fidelity of human body micro-structures. In this review, an overview of 4D printing as a fascinating tool for designing advanced smart materials is provided. Then will be discussed the recent progress in AI-empowered 3D and 4D printing with open-loop and closed-loop methods, in particular regarding shape-morphing 4D-responsive materials, printing on moving targets, and surgical robots for in situ printing. Lastly, an outlook on 5D printing is given as an advanced future technique, in which AI will assume the role of the fifth dimension to empower the effectiveness of 3D and 4D printing for developing intelligent systems in the biomedical sector and beyond.Entities:
Keywords: 4D printing; 5D printing; additive manufacturing; artificial intelligence; biomedicine; closed-loop AI; functional materials; open-loop AI; smart materials
Year: 2022 PMID: 35890571 PMCID: PMC9319487 DOI: 10.3390/polym14142794
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Polymers (Basel) ISSN: 2073-4360 Impact factor: 4.967
Figure 1Additive manufacturing history and milestones in the biomedical field.
Figure 2The possible uses of AI in 3D- and 4D printing applications. This figure was designed using icon made by freepik and berkhicon from flaticon.
Figure 3Schematic representation of different types of stimuli, and responses observed in smart materials in terms of shape-shifting, swelling, self-assembly, self-repair, and their possible use in biomedical applications.
Figure 4Illustration of (A) a shape-changing material with the “on-off” mechanism, and of (B) a shape-memory material with the two programming steps in which the structure of the material is deformed from its primary shape following the application of a stimulus and then kept in a temporary metastable shape until a second stimulus is applied allowing the recovery of the original shape.
Definition of common terms used in AM and AI.
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Figure 5Schematic representation of open-loop AI-based 3D printing approaches. (A) The open-loop structured light scan that allows the topographical matching of the geometry of the 3D-printed phantom biomimetic substrate with the anatomy of the porcine kidney, for fabricating microfluidic device conformably to this substrate and subsequently implantable to the surface of the porcine kidney. (B) Personalized skin 4D printer to print cell-laden fibrin/collagen hydrogels on wounds in real time thanks to the coupling of computer-vision algorithms and structured-light scanner.
Figure 6Schematic representation of closed-loop AI-based 4D printing approaches for autonomous minimally invasive surgery (MIS). (A) 4D inks delivery with biological and mechanical features mimicking the human body tissues and organs. (B) In situ bioprinting scaffolds with engineered cells to repair damaged tissues/organs. (C) Surgical robot-assisted implantation of 4D printed electrode arrays for neural interface.