未知数据源 2024年10月02日
3D printing creates strong, stretchy hydrogels that stick to tissue
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一项发表于《科学》杂志的新研究介绍了一种利用水凝胶制作粘合剂的3D 打印新方法,该方法有望在医学领域得到应用。3D 打印机可以通过逐层堆叠不同材料来构建复杂的形状和结构。医疗应用通常需要具有强韧性和弹性的生物材料,这些材料还需要能够粘附到移动的组织上,例如跳动的人类心脏或覆盖关节骨骼表面的坚韧软骨。许多研究人员正在研究使用称为水凝胶的生物材料来制作 3D 打印的组织、器官和植入物,水凝胶由交联的聚合物链网络构成。虽然在制造水凝胶领域取得了重大进展,但传统的 3D 打印水凝胶在拉伸时可能会断裂,在压力下可能会破裂。其他水凝胶则过于僵硬,无法塑造成可变形组织的形状。科罗拉多大学博尔德分校的研究人员与宾夕法尼亚大学和美国国家标准与技术研究院 (NIST) 合作,意识到他们可以通过加入交织的分子链来使 3D 打印的水凝胶更强韧、更有弹性,甚至可能使其能够粘附在潮湿的组织上。这种方法被称为 CLEAR,它使用空间光照射 (光聚合) 来设定物体的形状,而互补的氧化还原反应 (暗聚合) 则逐渐产生高浓度的缠结聚合物链。据研究人员所知,这是首次将光聚合和暗聚合同时结合起来,以增强使用数字光处理方法制造的生物材料的性能。不需要任何特殊设备 - CLEAR 依赖于传统的制造方法,只是在加工方面进行了一些调整。

😊 **CLEAR 技术原理**:CLEAR 技术利用空间光照射 (光聚合) 来设定物体的形状,而互补的氧化还原反应 (暗聚合) 则逐渐产生高浓度的缠结聚合物链。这种方法将光聚合和暗聚合同时结合起来,以增强使用数字光处理方法制造的生物材料的性能。 CLEAR 技术的创新之处在于它结合了光聚合和暗聚合两种方法,光聚合可以快速成形,而暗聚合则可以形成更强的缠结聚合物网络。这使得 CLEAR 技术能够制造出既强韧又具有弹性的水凝胶,并克服了传统 3D 打印水凝胶在强度和弹性方面存在的局限性。

🤩 **CLEAR 技术优势**:CLEAR 技术制造的水凝胶比传统数字光处理方法制造的水凝胶强韧 4 到 7 倍。此外,CLEAR 技术制造的水凝胶还能适应动物组织和器官的形状并粘附在上面。 CLEAR 技术的优势在于它能够制造出具有高强度和弹性的水凝胶,同时还能保持良好的生物相容性,这使得它在医疗领域具有广阔的应用前景。例如,CLEAR 技术可以用于制造可粘附于组织的生物粘合剂,用于修复组织损伤或进行手术。

🥳 **CLEAR 技术应用**:CLEAR 技术可以制造出各种形状的结构,例如多孔晶格,并可以引入空间粘合性,这些特点使其在生物医学应用方面具有巨大的潜力。 CLEAR 技术的应用范围非常广泛,除了生物医学领域外,还可以应用于制造其他材料,例如弹性体。此外,CLEAR 技术还可以减少制造过程中的能源消耗,具有环保意义。

😮 **CLEAR 技术未来发展**:研究人员目前正在进行进一步的研究,以更好地了解组织对打印的水凝胶的反应。 CLEAR 技术的未来发展方向主要集中在以下几个方面:一是探索 CLEAR 技术在生物医学领域的更多应用,二是研究 CLEAR 技术在其他材料制造方面的应用,三是研究 CLEAR 技术的环保意义。

🥰 **CLEAR 技术的意义**:CLEAR 技术为 3D 打印水凝胶提供了新的方法,为开发可粘附于组织的强韧弹性水凝胶开辟了新的途径,这将为生物医学领域带来革命性的变化。 CLEAR 技术的意义在于它为开发更先进的生物材料提供了新的工具,这将为治疗疾病、修复组织损伤、制造人工器官等领域带来新的突破。

A new method for 3D printing, described in Science, makes inroads into hydrogel-based adhesives for use in medicine.

3D printers, which deposit individual layers of a variety of materials, enable researchers to create complex shapes and structures. Medical applications often require strong and stretchable biomaterials that also stick to moving tissues, such as the beating human heart or tough cartilage covering the surfaces of bones at a joint.

Many researchers are pursuing 3D printed tissues, organs and implants created using biomaterials called hydrogels, which are made from networks of crosslinked polymer chains. While significant progress has been made in the field of fabricated hydrogels, traditional 3D printed hydrogels may break when stretched or crack under pressure. Others are too stiff to sculpt around deformable tissues.

Researchers at the University of Colorado Boulder, in collaboration with the University of Pennsylvania and the National Institutes of Standards and Technology (NIST), realized that they could incorporate intertwined chains of molecules to make 3D printed hydrogels stronger and more elastic – and possibly even allow them to stick to wet tissue. The method, known as CLEAR, sets an object’s shape using spatial light illumination (photopolymerization) while a complementary redox reaction (dark polymerization) gradually yields a high concentration of entangled polymer chains.

To their knowledge, the researchers say, this is the first time that light and dark polymerization have been combined simultaneously to enhance the properties of biomaterials fabricated using digital light processing methods. No special equipment is needed – CLEAR relies on conventional fabrication methods, with some tweaks in processing.

“This was developed by a graduate student in my group, Abhishek Dhand, and research associate Matt Davidson, who were looking at the literature on entangled polymer networks. In most of these cases, the entangled networks that form hydrogels with high levels of certain material properties…are made with very slow reactions,” explains Jason Burdick from CU-Boulder’s BioFrontiers Institute. “This is not compatible with [digital light processing], where each layer is reacted through short periods of light. The combination of the traditional [digital light processing] with light and the slow redox dark polymerization overcomes this.”

Experiments confirmed that hydrogels produced with CLEAR were fourfold to sevenfold tougher than hydrogels produced with conventional digital light processing methods for 3D printing. The CLEAR-fabricated hydrogels also conformed and stuck to animal tissues and organs.

“We illustrated in the paper the application of hydrogels printed with CLEAR as tissue adhesives, as others had previously defined material toughness as an important material property in adhesives. Through CLEAR, we can then process these adhesives into any structures, such as porous lattices or introduce spatial adhesion that may be of interest for biomedical applications,” Burdick says. “What is also interesting is that CLEAR can be used with other types of materials, such as elastomers, and we believe that it can be used across broad manufacturing methods.”

CLEAR could also have environmentally friendly implications for manufacturing and research, the researchers suggest, by eliminating the need for additional light or heat energy to harden parts. The researchers have filed for a provisional patent and will be conducting additional studies to better understand how tissues react to the printed hydrogels.

“Our work so far was mainly proof-of-concept of the method and showing a range of applications,” says Burdick. “The next step is to identify those applications where CLEAR can make an impact and then further explore those topics, whether this is specific to biomedicine or more broadly beyond this.”

The post 3D printing creates strong, stretchy hydrogels that stick to tissue appeared first on Physics World.

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3D 打印 水凝胶 生物材料 CLEAR 技术 医疗应用
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