University of Wollongong
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3D printing of highly flexible, cytocompatible nanocomposites for thermal management

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-17, 13:14 authored by Hadis Khakbaz, Kalani Ruberu, Lingzhi Kang, Sepehr Talebian, Sepidar Sayyar, Benjamin Filippi, Mehdi Khatamifar, Stephen Beirne, Peter C Innis
Highly flexible biocompatible materials that are both thermally conductive and electrically insulating are important for implantable and wearable bioelectronics applications. The ability to thermally process these materials into useful structures using additive manufacturing approaches opens up new opportunities for its use in bespoke structures. Here we investigate the three-dimensional (3D) printing of a medical-grade thermoplastic polyurethane (PU) elastomer, which is thermally insulating and enhance its thermal and mechanical properties through the incorporation of boron nitride (BN) as a filler. Via a simple solution compounding approach, a highly flexible and thermally conductive BN nanoparticle/ PU composite has been developed and subsequently processed into simple bio-scaffolds structures via a 3D pneumatic melt extrusion printing process. The addition of up to 20% w/w of BN to the PU significantly enhances the tensile modulus by 659%, from 1.74 to 13.2 MPa, while supporting high mechanical flexibility. The thermal conductivity of 20% w/w BN/PU composite increases by 74% with respect to the unmodified PU. The 3D printed BN/PU composite scaffolds exhibit good biocompatibility and cell attachment enhancement with L929 fibroblast cells. Graphical abstract: [Figure not available: see fulltext.]

Funding

Australian National Fabrication Facility (CE140100012)

History

Journal title

Journal of Materials Science

Volume

56

Issue

10

Pagination

6385-6400

Language

English

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