Structural tuning of anisotropic mechanical properties in 3D-Printed hydrogel lattices

被引:3
|
作者
Yoon, Daniel [1 ]
Eckstein, Kevin N. [1 ]
Ruding, Margrethe [1 ]
Bayly, Philip V. [1 ,2 ]
机构
[1] Washington Univ St Louis, Dept Mech Engn & Mat Sci, St Louis, MO 63130 USA
[2] Washington Univ St Louis, Dept Biomed Engn, St Louis, MO USA
基金
美国国家卫生研究院;
关键词
Digital light projection (DLP) printing; Hydrogel lattices; Anisotropy; Gibson -Ashby model; MAGNETIC-RESONANCE ELASTOGRAPHY; SHEAR-WAVE ELASTOGRAPHY; SOFT-TISSUE; PHANTOMS; DESIGN; SIZE;
D O I
10.1016/j.jmbbm.2024.106625
中图分类号
R318 [生物医学工程];
学科分类号
0831 ;
摘要
We investigated the ability to tune the anisotropic mechanical properties of 3D -printed hydrogel lattices by modifying their geometry (lattice strut diameter, unit cell size, and unit cell scaling factor). Many soft tissues are anisotropic and the ability to mimic natural anisotropy would be valuable for developing tissue -surrogate "phantoms" for elasticity imaging (shear wave elastography or magnetic resonance elastography). Vintile lattices were 3D -printed in polyethylene glycol di-acrylate (PEGDA) using digital light projection printing. Two mechanical benchtop tests, dynamic shear testing and unconfined compression, were used to measure the apparent shear storage moduli (G ' ) and apparent Young's moduli (E) of lattice samples. Increasing the unit cell size from 1.25 mm to 2.00 mm reduced the Young's and shear moduli of the lattices by 91% and 85%, respectively. Decreasing the strut diameter from 300 mu m to 200 mu m reduced the apparent shear moduli of the lattices by 95%. Increasing the geometric scaling ratio of the lattice unit cells from 1.00 x to 2.00 x increased mechanical anisotropy in shear (by a factor of 3.1) and in compression (by a factor of 2.9). Both simulations and experiments show that the effects of unit cell size and strut diameter are consistent with power law relationships between volume fraction and apparent elastic moduli. In particular, experimental measurements of apparent Young's moduli agree well with predictions of the theoretical Gibson -Ashby model. Thus, the anisotropic mechanical properties of a lattice can be tuned by the unit cell size, the strut diameter, and scaling factors. This approach will be valuable in designing tissue -mimicking hydrogel lattice -based composite materials for elastography phantoms and tissue engineered scaffolds.
引用
收藏
页数:13
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Design and characterization of 3-D printed hydrogel lattices with anisotropic mechanical properties
    Yoon, Daniel
    Ruding, Margrethe
    Guertler, Charlotte A.
    Okamoto, Ruth J.
    Bayly, Philip, V
    JOURNAL OF THE MECHANICAL BEHAVIOR OF BIOMEDICAL MATERIALS, 2023, 138
  • [2] 3D-Printed Anisotropic Nanofiber Composites with Gradual Mechanical Properties
    Lackner, Florian
    Knechtl, Ivan
    Novak, Maximilian
    Nagaraj, Chandran
    Dobaj Stiglic, Andreja
    Kargl, Rupert
    Olschewski, Andrea
    Stana Kleinschek, Karin
    Mohan, Tamilselvan
    ADVANCED MATERIALS TECHNOLOGIES, 2023, 8 (10):
  • [3] 3D-printed bioinspired cage lattices with defect-tolerant mechanical properties
    Yang, Haoming
    Cao, Xiaofei
    Zhang, Yao
    Li, Ying
    ADDITIVE MANUFACTURING, 2024, 82
  • [4] Mechanical properties of 3D-printed pentadiamond
    Felix, Levi C.
    Ambekar, Rushikesh S.
    Woellner, Cristiano F.
    Kushwaha, Brijesh
    Pal, Varinder
    Tiwary, Chandra S.
    Galvao, Douglas S.
    JOURNAL OF PHYSICS D-APPLIED PHYSICS, 2022, 55 (46)
  • [5] Printed hydrogel nanocomposites: fine-tuning nanostructure for anisotropic mechanical and conductive properties
    Weiwei Zhao
    Lijin Chen
    Sanming Hu
    Zhijun Shi
    Xing Gao
    Vadim V. Silberschmidt
    Advanced Composites and Hybrid Materials, 2020, 3 : 315 - 324
  • [6] Printed hydrogel nanocomposites: fine-tuning nanostructure for anisotropic mechanical and conductive properties
    Zhao, Weiwei
    Chen, Lijin
    Hu, Sanming
    Shi, Zhijun
    Gao, Xing
    Silberschmidt, Vadim V.
    ADVANCED COMPOSITES AND HYBRID MATERIALS, 2020, 3 (03) : 315 - 324
  • [7] Mechanical properties of 3D-printed blood vessels
    Wang, Jiyan
    Krishnamoorthy, Srikumar
    Song, Hongtao
    Ma, Changhong
    DYNA, 2020, 95 (05): : 541 - 545
  • [8] Improving the Mechanical Properties of 3D-Printed Metal
    Kabaldin Y.G.
    Anosov M.S.
    Kolchin P.V.
    Shatagin D.A.
    Russian Engineering Research, 2023, 43 (08) : 976 - 979
  • [9] Evaluation of the Mechanical Properties of a 3D-Printed Mortar
    Lee, Hojae
    Kim, Jang-Ho Jay
    Moon, Jae-Heum
    Kim, Won-Woo
    Seo, Eun-A
    MATERIALS, 2019, 12 (24)
  • [10] Numerical Investigation on the Effect of Residual Stresses on the Effective Mechanical Properties of 3D-Printed TPMS Lattices
    Ahmed, Nissar
    Barsoum, Imad
    Abu Al-Rub, Rashid K.
    METALS, 2022, 12 (08)