Volumetric Printing across Melt Electrowritten Scaffolds Fabricates Multi-Material Living Constructs with Tunable Architecture and Mechanics

Publication date

2023-08-10

Authors

Größbacher, Gabriel
Bartolf-Kopp, Michael
Gergely, Csaba
Bernal, Paulina Núñez
Florczak, Sammy
de Ruijter, Mylène
Rodriguez, Núria Ginés
Groll, Jürgen
Malda, JosORCID 0000-0002-9241-7676ISNI 0000000388144393
Jüngst, Tomasz

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
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License

cc_by

Abstract

Major challenges in biofabrication revolve around capturing the complex, hierarchical composition of native tissues. However, individual 3D printing techniques have limited capacity to produce composite biomaterials with multi-scale resolution. Volumetric bioprinting recently emerged as a paradigm-shift in biofabrication. This ultrafast, light-based technique sculpts cell-laden hydrogel bioresins into 3D structures in a layerless fashion, providing enhanced design freedom over conventional bioprinting. However, it yields prints with low mechanical stability, since soft, cell-friendly hydrogels are used. Herein, the possibility to converge volumetric bioprinting with melt electrowriting, which excels at patterning microfibers, is shown for the fabrication of tubular hydrogel-based composites with enhanced mechanical behavior. Despite including non-transparent melt electrowritten scaffolds in the volumetric printing process, high-resolution bioprinted structures are successfully achieved. Tensile, burst, and bending mechanical properties of printed tubes are tuned altering the electrowritten mesh design, resulting in complex, multi-material tubular constructs with customizable, anisotropic geometries that better mimic intricate biological tubular structures. As a proof-of-concept, engineered tubular structures are obtained by building trilayered cell-laden vessels, and features (valves, branches, fenestrations) that can be rapidly printed using this hybrid approach. This multi-technology convergence offers a new toolbox for manufacturing hierarchical and mechanically tunable multi-material living structures.

Keywords

biofabrication, bioprinting hydrogels, melt electrowriting, volumetric additive manufacturing, Mechanics of Materials, Mechanical Engineering, General Materials Science, SDG 9 - Industry, Innovation, and Infrastructure

Citation

Größbacher, G, Bartolf-Kopp, M, Gergely, C, Bernal, P N, Florczak, S, de Ruijter, M, Rodriguez, N G, Groll, J, Malda, J, Jüngst, T & Levato, R 2023, 'Volumetric Printing across Melt Electrowritten Scaffolds Fabricates Multi-Material Living Constructs with Tunable Architecture and Mechanics', Advanced Materials, vol. 35, no. 32, 2300756, pp. 1-18. https://doi.org/10.1002/adma.202300756