University of Wollongong
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Three-dimensional printing fiber reinforced hydrogel composites

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journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-16, 09:25 authored by Shannon Bakarich, Robert Gorkin III, Peter in het PanhuisPeter in het Panhuis, Geoffrey SpinksGeoffrey Spinks
An additive manufacturing process that combines digital modeling and 3D printing was used to prepare fiber reinforced hydrogels in a single-step process. The composite materials were fabricated by selectively pattering a combination of alginate/acrylamide gel precursor solution and an epoxy based UV-curable adhesive (Emax 904 Gel-SC) with an extrusion printer. UV irradiation was used to cure the two inks into a single composite material. Spatial control of fiber distribution within the digital models allowed for the fabrication of a series of materials with a spectrum of swelling behavior and mechanical properties with physical characteristics ranging from soft and wet to hard and dry. A comparison with the "rule of mixtures" was used to show that the swollen composite materials adhere to standard composite theory. A prototype meniscus cartilage was prepared to illustrate the potential application in bioengineering.

Funding

Mechanical advantage: biomimetic artificial muscles for micro-machines

Australian Research Council

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History

Citation

Bakarich, S. E., Gorkin, III, R., in het Panhuis, M. & Spinks, G. M. (2014). Three-dimensional printing fiber reinforced hydrogel composites. ACS Applied Materials and Interfaces, 6 (18), 15998-16006.

Journal title

ACS Applied Materials and Interfaces

Volume

6

Issue

18

Pagination

15998-16006

Language

English

RIS ID

94777

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