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1.
The emerging 3D printing technique allows for tailoring hydrogel‐based soft structure tissue scaffolds for individualized therapy of osteochondral defects. However, the weak mechanical strength and uncontrollable swelling intrinsic to conventional hydrogels restrain their use as bioinks. Here, a high‐strength thermoresponsive supramolecular copolymer hydrogel is synthesized by one‐step copolymerization of dual hydrogen bonding monomers, N‐acryloyl glycinamide, and N‐[tris(hydroxymethyl)methyl] acrylamide. The obtained copolymer hydrogels demonstrate excellent mechanical properties—robust tensile strength (up to 0.41 MPa), large stretchability (up to 860%), and high compressive strength (up to 8.4 MPa). The rapid thermoreversible gel ? sol transition behavior makes this copolymer hydrogel suitable for direct 3D printing. Successful preparation of 3D‐printed biohybrid gradient hydrogel scaffolds is demonstrated with controllable 3D architecture, owing to shear thinning property which allows continuous extrusion through a needle and also immediate gelation of fluid upon deposition on the cooled substrate. Furthermore, this biohybrid gradient hydrogel scaffold printed with transforming growth factor beta 1 and β‐tricalciumphosphate on distinct layers facilitates the attachment, spreading, and chondrogenic and osteogenic differentiation of human bone marrow stem cells (hBMSCs) in vitro. The in vivo experiments reveal that the 3D‐printed biohybrid gradient hydrogel scaffolds significantly accelerate simultaneous regeneration of cartilage and subchondral bone in a rat model.  相似文献   

2.
Bioprinting is an emerging technology for the fabrication of patient‐specific, anatomically complex tissues and organs. A novel bioink for printing cartilage grafts is developed based on two unmodified FDA‐compliant polysaccharides, gellan and alginate, combined with the clinical product BioCartilage (cartilage extracellular matrix particles). Cell‐friendly physical gelation of the bioink occurs in the presence of cations, which are delivered by co‐extrusion of a cation‐loaded transient support polymer to stabilize overhanging structures. Rheological properties of the bioink reveal optimal shear thinning and shear recovery properties for high‐fidelity bioprinting. Tensile testing of the bioprinted grafts reveals a strong, ductile material. As proof of concept, 3D auricular, nasal, meniscal, and vertebral disk grafts are printed based on computer tomography data or generic 3D models. Grafts after 8 weeks in vitro are scanned using magnetic resonance imaging and histological evaluation is performed. The bioink containing BioCartilage supports proliferation of chondrocytes and, in the presence of transforming growth factor beta‐3, supports strong deposition of cartilage matrix proteins. A clinically compliant bioprinting method is presented which yields patient‐specific cartilage grafts with good mechanical and biological properties. The versatile method can be used with any type of tissue particles to create tissue‐specific and bioactive scaffolds.  相似文献   

3.
3D printing is recognized as a powerful tool to develop complex geometries for a variety of materials including nanocellulose. Herein, a one‐pot synthesis of 3D printable hydrogel ink containing zeolitic imidazolate frameworks (ZIF‐8) anchored on anionic 2,2,6,6‐tetramethylpiperidine‐1‐oxylradical‐mediated oxidized cellulose nanofibers (TOCNF) is presented. The synthesis approach of ZIF‐8@TOCNF (CelloZIF8) hybrid inks is simple, fast (≈30 min), environmentally friendly, takes place at room temperature, and allows easy encapsulation of guest molecules such as curcumin. Shear thinning properties of the hybrid hydrogel inks facilitate the 3D printing of porous scaffolds with excellent shape fidelity. The scaffolds show pH controlled curcumin release. The synthesis route offers a general approach for metal–organic frameworks (MOF) processing and is successfully applied to other types of MOFs such as MIL‐100 (Fe) and other guest molecules as methylene blue. This study may open new venues for MOFs processing and its large‐scale applications.  相似文献   

4.
3D printing of high-strength and antiswelling hydrogel-based load-bearing soft tissue scaffolds with similar geometric shape to natural tissues remains a great challenge owing to insurmountable trade-off between strength and printability. Herein, capitalizing on the concentration-dependent H-bonding-strengthened mechanism of supramolecular poly(N-acryloyl glycinamide) (PNAGA) hydrogel, a self-thickening and self-strengthening strategy, that is, loading the concentrated NAGA monomer into the thermoreversible low-strength PNAGA hydrogel is proposed to directly 3D printing latently H-bonding-reinforced hydrogels. The low-strength PNAGA serves to thicken the concentrated NAGA monomer, affording an appropriate viscosity for thermal-assisted extrusion 3D printing of soft PNAGA hydrogels bearing NAGA monomer and initiator, which are further polymerized to eventually generate high-strength and antiswelling hydrogels, due to the reconstruction of strong H-bonding interactions from postcompensatory PNAGA. Diverse polymer hydrogels can be printed with self-thickened corresponding monomer inks. Further, the self-thickened high-strength PNAGA hydrogel is printed into a meniscus, which is implanted in rabbit's knee as a substitute with in vivo outcome showing an appealing ability to efficiently alleviate the cartilage surface wear. The self-thickening strategy is applicable to directly printing a variety of polymer-hydrogel-based tissue engineering scaffolds without sacrificing mechanical strength, thus circumventing problems of printing high-strength hydrogels and facilitating their application scope.  相似文献   

5.
3D printing technology has been widely explored for the rapid design and fabrication of hydrogels, as required by complicated soft structures and devices. Here, a new 3D printing method is presented based on the rheology modifier of Carbomer for direct ink writing of various functional hydrogels. Carbomer is shown to be highly efficient in providing ideal rheological behaviors for multifunctional hydrogel inks, including double network hydrogels, magnetic hydrogels, temperature‐sensitive hydrogels, and biogels, with a low dosage (at least 0.5% w/v) recorded. Besides the excellent printing performance, mechanical behaviors, and biocompatibility, the 3D printed multifunctional hydrogels enable various soft devices, including loadable webs, soft robots, 4D printed leaves, and hydrogel Petri dishes. Moreover, with its unprecedented capability, the Carbomer‐based 3D printing method opens new avenues for bioprinting manufacturing and integrated hydrogel devices.  相似文献   

6.
A bioengineered spinal cord is fabricated via extrusion‐based multimaterial 3D bioprinting, in which clusters of induced pluripotent stem cell (iPSC)‐derived spinal neuronal progenitor cells (sNPCs) and oligodendrocyte progenitor cells (OPCs) are placed in precise positions within 3D printed biocompatible scaffolds during assembly. The location of a cluster of cells, of a single type or multiple types, is controlled using a point‐dispensing printing method with a 200 µm center‐to‐center spacing within 150 µm wide channels. The bioprinted sNPCs differentiate and extend axons throughout microscale scaffold channels, and the activity of these neuronal networks is confirmed by physiological spontaneous calcium flux studies. Successful bioprinting of OPCs in combination with sNPCs demonstrates a multicellular neural tissue engineering approach, where the ability to direct the patterning and combination of transplanted neuronal and glial cells can be beneficial in rebuilding functional axonal connections across areas of central nervous system (CNS) tissue damage. This platform can be used to prepare novel biomimetic, hydrogel‐based scaffolds modeling complex CNS tissue architecture in vitro and harnessed to develop new clinical approaches to treat neurological diseases, including spinal cord injury.  相似文献   

7.
Two major challenges of 3D bioprinting are the retention of structural fidelity and efficient endothelialization for tissue vascularization. Both of these issues are addressed by introducing a versatile 3D bioprinting strategy, in which a templating bioink is deposited layer‐by‐layer alongside a matrix bioink to establish void‐free multimaterial structures. After crosslinking the matrix phase, the templating phase is sacrificed to create a well‐defined 3D network of interconnected tubular channels. This void‐free 3D printing (VF‐3DP) approach circumvents the traditional concerns of structural collapse, deformation, and oxygen inhibition, moreover, it can be readily used to print materials that are widely considered “unprintable.” By preloading endothelial cells into the templating bioink, the inner surface of the channels can be efficiently cellularized with a confluent endothelial layer. This in situ endothelialization method can be used to produce endothelium with a far greater cell seeding uniformity than can be achieved using the conventional postseeding approach. This VF‐3DP approach can also be extended beyond tissue fabrication and toward customized hydrogel‐based microfluidics and self‐supported perfusable hydrogel constructs.  相似文献   

8.
A successful 3D printable hydrogel ink needs not only biofunctionalities but also minimal fabrication steps such as multiple crosslinking sites, high printability, cytocompatibility, high shape fidelity, stability, shear thinning, robust properties, and less time-consuming processing steps, by maximizing known material chemistries and functionalities. This work reports a novel bioinspired conjugate with polysaccharide (alginate)–tannic acid (TA)–protein (bovine serum albumin) to fabricate proteoglycan-like gels, which are 3D printable with multilayers, shear-thinning, elastic, electroconductive (with carbon nanotubes), controlled crosslinking/degradation through multiple crosslinking mechanisms (TA, Ca2+ ions, and NaIO4 oxidation), and interactions with cytocompatible hydrogel system. The synthesis process is simple, and gelation (within 2 h) is ensured without any chemical crosslinking agents (at room temperature). While cell-adhesive albumin largely improves cytocompatibility, carbon nanotubes in the gel give electrical conductivity in the different four-axis 3D printed structures, including large hollow tubular constructs. This work demonstrates promising results of electroconductive proteoglycan-like gel ink to address the challenges in 3D/four-axis ink printing such as synthesis, printability, shape fidelity, electroconductivity, controlled fabrication and degradation, cytocompatibility, and multiple crosslinking abilities to maintain the dimensions of the diversely printed constructs.  相似文献   

9.
A new method for complex metallic architecture fabrication is presented, through synthesis and 3D‐printing of a new class of 3D‐inks into green‐body structures followed by thermochemical transformation into sintered metallic counterparts. Small and large volumes of metal‐oxide, metal, and metal compound 3D‐printable inks are synthesized through simple mixing of solvent, powder, and the biomedical elastomer, polylactic‐co‐glycolic acid (PLGA). These inks can be 3D‐printed under ambient conditions via simple extrusion at speeds upwards of 150 mm s–1 into millimeter‐ and centimeter‐scale thin, thick, high aspect ratio, hollow and enclosed, and multi‐material architectures. The resulting 3D‐printed green‐bodies can be handled immediately, are remarkably robust, and may be further manipulated prior to metallic transformation. Green‐bodies are transformed into metallic counterparts without warping or cracking through reduction and sintering in a H2 atmosphere at elevated temperatures. It is shown that primary metal and binary alloy structures can be created from inks comprised of single and mixed oxide powders, and the versatility of the process is illustrated through its extension to more than two dozen additional metal‐based materials. A potential application of this new system is briefly demonstrated through cyclic reduction and oxidation of 3D‐printed iron oxide constructs, which remain intact through numerous redox cycles.  相似文献   

10.
Effective integration of molecular self‐assembly and additive manufacturing would provide a technological leap in bioprinting. This article reports on a biofabrication system based on the hydrodynamically guided co‐assembly of peptide amphiphiles (PAs) with naturally occurring biomolecules and proteins to generate hierarchical constructs with tuneable molecular composition and structural control. The system takes advantage of droplet‐on‐demand inkjet printing to exploit interfacial fluid forces and guide molecular self‐assembly into aligned or disordered nanofibers, hydrogel structures of different geometries and sizes, surface topographies, and higher‐ordered constructs bound by molecular diffusion. PAs are designed to co‐assemble during printing in cell diluent conditions with a range of extracellular matrix (ECM) proteins and biomolecules including fibronectin, collagen, keratin, elastin‐like proteins, and hyaluronic acid. Using combinations of these molecules, NIH‐3T3 and adipose derived stem cells are bioprinted within complex structures while exhibiting high cell viability (>88%). By integrating self‐assembly with 3D‐bioprinting, the study introduces a novel biofabrication platform capable of encapsulating and spatially distributing multiple cell types within tuneable pericellular environments. In this way, the work demonstrates the potential of the approach to generate complex bioactive scaffolds for applications such as tissue engineering, in vitro models, and drug screening.  相似文献   

11.
3D‐printing is emerging as a technology to introduce microchannels into hydrogels, for the perfusion of engineered constructs. Although numerous techniques have been developed, new techniques are still needed to obtain the complex geometries of blood vessels and with materials that permit desired cellular responses. Here, a printing process where a shear‐thinning and self‐healing hydrogel “ink” is injected directly into a “support” hydrogel with similar properties is reported. The support hydrogel is further engineered to undergo stabilization through a thiol‐ene reaction, permitting (i) the washing of the ink to produce microchannels and (ii) tunable properties depending on the crosslinker design. When adhesive peptides are included in the support hydrogel, endothelial cells form confluent monolayers within the channels, across a range of printed configurations (e.g., straight, stenosis, spiral). When protease‐degradable crosslinkers are used for the support hydrogel and gradients of angiogenic factors are introduced, endothelial cells sprout into the support hydrogel in the direction of the gradient. This printing approach is used to investigate the influence of channel curvature on angiogenic sprouting and increased sprouting is observed at curved locations. Ultimately, this technique can be used for a range of biomedical applications, from engineering vascularized tissue constructs to modeling in vitro cultures.  相似文献   

12.
Currently, most customized hydrogels can only be processed via extrusion-based 3D printing techniques, which is limited by printing efficiency and resolution. Here, a simple strategy for the rapid fabrication of customized hydrogels using a photocurable 3D printing technique is presented. This technique has been rarely used because the presence of water increases the molecular distance between the polymer chains and reduces the monomer polymerization rate, resulting in the failure of rapid solid-liquid separation during printing. Although adding cross-linkers to printing inks can effectively accelerate 3D cross-linked network formation, chemical cross-linking may result in reduced toughness and self-healing ability of the hydrogel. Therefore, an interpenetrated-network hydrogel based on non-covalent interactions is designed to form physical cross-links, affording fast solid-liquid separation. Poly(acrylic acid (AA)-N-vinyl-2-pyrrolidone (NVP)) and carboxymethyl cellulose (CMC) are cross-linked via Zn2+-ligand coordination and hydrogen bonding; the resulting mixed AA-NVP/CMC solution is used as the printing ink. The printed poly(AA-NVP/CMC) hydrogel exhibited high tensile toughness (3.38 MJ m−3) and superior self-healing ability (healed stress: 81%; healed strain: 91%). Some objects like manipulator are successfully customized by photocurable 3D printing using hydrogels with high toughness and complex structures. This high-performance hydrogel has great potential for application in flexible wearable sensors.  相似文献   

13.
The development of multifunctional 3D printing materials from sustainable natural resources is a high priority in additive manufacturing. Using an eco-friendly method to transform hard pollen grains into stimulus-responsive microgel particles, we engineered a pollen-derived microgel suspension that can serve as a functional reinforcement for composite hydrogel inks and as a supporting matrix for versatile freeform 3D printing systems. The pollen microgel particles enabled the printing of composite inks and improved the mechanical and physiological stabilities of alginate and hyaluronic acid hydrogel scaffolds for 3D cell culture applications. Moreover, the particles endowed the inks with stimulus-responsive controlled release properties. The suitability of the pollen microgel suspension as a supporting matrix for freeform 3D printing of alginate and silicone rubber inks was demonstrated and optimized by tuning the rheological properties of the microgel. Compared with other classes of natural materials, pollen grains have several compelling features, including natural abundance, renewability, affordability, processing ease, monodispersity, and tunable rheological features, which make them attractive candidates to engineer advanced materials for 3D printing applications.  相似文献   

14.
In the booming development of flexible electronics represented by electronic skins, soft robots, and human–machine interfaces, 3D printing of hydrogels, an approach used by the biofabrication community, is drawing attention from researchers working on hydrogel-based stretchable ionotronic devices. Such devices can greatly benefit from the excellent patterning capability of 3D printing in three dimensions, as well as the free design complexity and easy upscale potential. Compared to the advanced stage of 3D bioprinting, 3D printing of hydrogel ionotronic devices is in its infancy due to the difficulty in balancing printability, ionic conductivity, shape fidelity, stretchability, and other functionalities. In this review, a guideline is provided on how to utilize the power of 3D printing in building high-performance hydrogel-based stretchable ionotronic devices mainly from a materials’ point of view, highlighting the systematic approach to balancing the printability, printing quality, and performance of printed devices. Various 3D printing methods for hydrogels are introduced, and then the ink design principles, balancing printing quality, printed functions, such as elastic conductivity, self-healing ability, and device (e.g., flexible sensors, shape-morphing actuators, soft robots, electroluminescent devices, and electrochemical biosensors) performances are discussed. In conclusion, perspectives on the future directions of this exciting field are presented.  相似文献   

15.
Direct ink writing (DIW) provides programmable and customizable platforms to engineer hierarchically organized constructs. However, one‐step, facile synthesis of such architectures via DIW has been challenging. This study introduces inks based on two‐phase emulgels for direct printing and in situ formation of protecting layers enveloping multicomponent cores, mimicking skin‐bearing biological systems. The emulgel consists of a Pickering emulsion with an organic, internal phase containing poly(lactic acid) stabilized by chitin/cellulose nanofibers and a continuous, cross‐linkable hydrogel containing cellulose nanofibers and any of the given solid particles. The shear during ink extrusion through nozzles of low surface energy facilitates the generation of the enveloped structures via fast and spontaneous phase separation of the emulgel. The skin‐bearing architectures enable control of mass transport as a novel configuration for cargo release. As a demonstration, a hydrophilic molecule is loaded in the hydrogel, which is released through the core and skin, enabling regulation of diffusion and permeation phenomena. This 3D‐printed functional material allows independent control of strength owing to the hierarchical construction. The new method of fabrication is proposed as a simple way to achieve protection, regulation, and sensation, taking the example of the functions of skins and cuticles, which are ubiquitous in nature.  相似文献   

16.
Shape‐morphing hydrogels have emerging applications in biomedical devices, soft robotics, and so on. However, successful applications require a combination of excellent mechanical properties and fast responding speed, which are usually a trade‐off in hydrogel‐based devices. Here, a facile approach to fabricate 3D gel constructs by extrusion‐based printing of tough physical hydrogels, which show programmable deformations with high response speed and large output force, is described. Highly viscoelastic poly(acrylic acid‐co‐acrylamide) (P(AAc‐co‐AAm)) and poly(acrylic acid‐coN‐isopropyl acrylamide) (P(AAc‐co‐NIPAm)) solutions or their mixtures are printed into 3D constructs by using multiple nozzles, which are then transferred into FeCl3 solution to gel the structures by forming robust carboxyl–Fe3+ coordination complexes. The printed gel fibers containing poly(N‐isopropyl acrylamide) segment exhibit considerable volume contraction in concentrated saline solution, whereas the P(AAc‐co‐AAm) ones do not contract. The mismatch in responsiveness of the gel fibers affords the integrated 3D gel constructs the shape‐morphing ability. Because of the small diameter of gel fibers, the printed gel structures deform and recover with a fast speed. A four‐armed gripper is designed to clamp plastic balls with considerable holding force, as large as 115 times the weight of the gripper. This strategy should be applicable to other tough hydrogels and broaden their applications.  相似文献   

17.
3D printed graphene aerogels hold promise for flexible sensing fields due to their flexibility, low density, conductivity, and piezo-resistivity. However, low printing accuracy/fidelity and stochastic porous networks have hindered both sensing performance and device miniaturization. Here, printable graphene oxide (GO) inks are formulated through modulating oxygen functional groups, which allows printing of self-standing 3D graphene oxide aerogel microlattice (GOAL) with an ultra-high printing resolution of 70 µm. The reduced GOAL (RGOAL) is then stuck onto the adhesive tape as a facile and large-scale strategy to adapt their functionalities into target applications. Benefiting from the printing resolution of 70 µm, RGOAL tape shows better performance and data readability when used as micro sensors and robot e-skin. By adjusting the molecular structure of GO, the research realizes regulation of rheological properties of GO hydrogel and the 3D printing of lightweight and ultra-precision RGOAL, improves the sensing accuracy of graphene aerogel electronic devices and realizes the device miniaturization, expanding the application of graphene aerogel devices to a broader field such as micro robots, which is beyond the reach of previous reports.  相似文献   

18.
Extrusion printing of interdigitated electrodes for flexible microsupercapacitors (fMSCs) offers an attractive route to the fabrication of flexible devices where cost, scalability, and processability of ink formulations are critical. In this work, highly concentrated, viscous, and water‐dispersible inks are developed based on graphene oxide (GO)/polyaniline (PANi) composite for extrusion printing. The optimized GO/PANi‐based all‐solid‐state symmetric fMSCs obtained by extrusion printing interdigitated microelectrodes can deliver outstanding areal capacitance of 153.6 mF cm?2 and volumetric capacitance of 19.2 F cm?3 at 5 mV s?1. It is shown that by fabricating asymmetric fMSCs using the GO/PANi as positive electrode and a graphene‐based negative electrode, the voltage window can be widened from 0.8 to 1.2 V and improvements can be achieved in energy density (from 3.36 to 4.83 mWh cm?3), power density (from 9.82 to 25.3 W cm?3), and cycling stability (from 75% to 100% capacitance retention over 5000 cycles) compared with the symmetric counterpart. The simple ink preparation and facile device fabrication protocols reported here make the scalable fabrication of extrusion printed fMSCs a promising technology.  相似文献   

19.
There have been a number of recently reported approaches for the manufacture of complex 3D printed cell‐containing hydrogels. Given the fragility of the parts during manufacturing, the most successful approaches use a supportive particulate gel bed and have enabled the production of complex gel structures previously unattainable using other 3D printing methods. The supporting gel bed provides protection to the fragile printed part during the printing process, preventing the structure from collapsing under its own weight prior to crosslinking. Despite the apparent similarity of the particulate beds, the way the particles are manufactured strongly influences how they interact with one another and the part during fabrication, with implications to the quality of the final product. Recently, the process of suspended layer additive manufacture (SLAM) is demonstrated to create a structure that recapitulated the osteochondral region by printing into an agarose particulate gel. The manufacturing process for this gel (the application of shear during gelation) produced a self‐healing gel with rapid recovery of its elastic properties following disruption. Here, the physical characteristics of the supporting fluid‐gel matrix used in SLAM are explored, and compared to other particulate gel supporting beds, highlighting its potential for producing complex hydrogel‐based parts.  相似文献   

20.
2D titanium carbides (MXene) possess significant characteristics including high conductivity and electromagnetic interference shielding efficiency (EMI SE) that are important for applications in printed and flexible electronics. However, MXene‐based ink formulations are yet to be demonstrated for proper inkjet printing of MXene patterns. Here, tandem repeat synthetic proteins based on squid ring teeth (SRT) are employed as templates of molecular self‐assembly to engineer MXene inks that can be printed as stimuli‐responsive electrodes on various substrates including cellulose paper, glass, and flexible polyethylene terephthalate (PET). MXene electrodes printed on PET substrates are able to display electrical conductivity values as high as 1080 ± 175 S cm?1, which significantly exceeds electrical conductivity values of state‐of‐the‐art inkjet‐printed electrodes composed of other 2D materials including graphene (250 S cm?1) and reduced graphene oxide (340 S cm?1). Furthermore, this high electrical conductivity is sustained under excessive bending deformation. These flexible electrodes also exhibit effective EMI SE values reaching 50 dB at films with thicknesses of 1.35 µm, which mainly originate from their high electrical conductivity and layered structure.  相似文献   

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