Saturday, November 5, 2016

TECH SPECIAL.... Evaluation of 3D Printing and Its Potential Impact on Biotechnology and the Chemical Sciences PART 2

Evaluation of 3D Printing and Its Potential Impact on Biotechnology and the Chemical Sciences
PART 2

Inkjet Printing
The concept of inkjet printing was initially described in 1878 by Lord Rayleigh, and in 1951, Siemens patented the first two-dimensional (2D) inkjet type printer called a Rayleigh break-up inkjet device. Since its advent, inkjet printing has served much use in commercial industry, mostly for printing inks on paper. However, as far back as 2001, inkjet printing has also been used for printing structures out of sol–gel, conductive polymers, ceramic, metal, and nucleic acid or protein materials, as described in reviews.
The two main types of inkjet printing are continuous and drop-on-demand (DOD). The continuous inkjet printing technique, which was developed by Sweet at Stanford University in the mid 1960s, requires electrostatic plates in the printer head to direct ink droplets onto paper for printing or into a waste compartment to be recycled and reused. The droplet size and spacing are controlled by application of a pressure wave pattern. In the DOD technique, which was pioneered by Zoltan and Kyser and Sears a voltage and pressure pulse directs the ink droplet, eliminating the need for the separation of waste ink from the printer head. Since the advent of the two main inkjet printing methods, there has been significant development of new printing techniques in both categories.
3D inkjet printing is mainly a powder-based method where layers of solid particles, typically 200 μm in height with particle sizes ranging between 50 and 100 μm, are bound together by a printed liquid material to generate a 3D model. Specifically, a first layer of powder is distributed evenly on the top of a support stage, e.g., by a roller, after which an inkjet printer head prints droplets of liquid binding material onto the powder layer at desired areas of solidification. After the first layer is completed, the stage drops and a second powder layer is distributed and selectively combined with printed binding material. These steps are repeated until a 3D model is generated, after which the model is usually heat-treated to enhance the binding of the powders at desired regions. Unbound powder serves as support material during the process and is removed after fabrication.
As a powder-based 3D printing technique, inkjet printing does not require photopolymerizable materials or liquids with modified viscosities. Powders from polymer, ceramic, or glass materials can be combined with liquid binding materials to generate a 3D model, which has significantly expanded the technique’s application in areas like art design and industrial modeling. Biological scaffold fabrication, which will be discussed in more detail in later sections particularly with respect to drug delivery studies, was impacted by the aforementioned technique. However, one caveat for the method is that the printed liquid’s chemical and physical properties will dominate those of the printed device. For example, many polymer glues are biologically toxic and thus cannot be used for tissue scaffold fabrication. Another limitation of inkjet printing is the optical transparency of finished devices; incomplete interaction of binding liquid with powder particles can cause a material to have reduced transparency due to light scattering, which would be a severe limitation for microscopy studies. Unbound particles can also result in significant porosity of finished materials and surface roughness, which, depending on the application, can be an advantage or limitation. However, nonpowder based (usually polymer-based) inkjet methods do exist, e.g., Stratasys PolyJet technology, which can print 16 μm photopolymer layers.
Selective Laser Sintering (SLS)
Developed by Carl Deckard and Joseph Beaman in the Mechanical Engineering Department at the University of Texas-Austin in the mid-1980s, SLS is another powder-based 3D model fabrication method. Although SLS is similar to inkjet printing, SLS uses a high power laser, e.g, CO2 and Nd:YAG, to sinter polymer powders to generate a 3D model, rather than using liquid binding materials to glue powder particles together. In the SLS process, a first layer of powder is distributed evenly onto a stage by a roller and is then heated to a temperature just below the powder’s melting point. Following the cross-sectional profiles designated in the .STL file, a laser beam is selectively scanned over the powder to raise the local temperature to the powder’s melting point to fuse powder particles together. After the first layer is completed, a second layer of powder is added, leveled, and sintered in the desired areas. These steps are repeated to create a 3D model. The powders that are not sintered by the laser serve as support material during the process and are removed after fabrication. Figure 3B provides a schematic of the process of SLS. A more detailed discussion of SLS basics such as laser types and binding mechanisms can be found in the literature.
One advantage of SLS is that a wide range of materials can be used, from polymers such as polycarbonate (PC), polyvinyl chloride (PVC), acrylonitrile butadiene styrene (ABS), nylon, resin, and polyester to metal and ceramic powders. Also, a binding liquid material is not required in SLS. However, SLS printed models suffer shrinkage or deformation due to thermal heating from the laser and subsequent cooling, which has been under investigation in the literature for some time. Achievable resolutions in SLS techniques are dependent on multiple parameters including laser power and focusing as well as the size of the powder material. Work is ongoing to push fabricated feature sizes using SLS below that of inkjet printing techniques, roughly below 50 μm.

Fused Deposition Modeling (FDM)
Developed by Scott Crump of Stratasys, FDM is one of the most widely used manufacturing technologies for rapid prototyping today. FDM fabricates a 3D model by extruding thermoplastic materials and depositing the semimolten materials onto a stage layer by layerThermoplastic filaments, the material used to build 3D models, are moved by two rollers down to the nozzle tip of the extruder of a print head, where they are heated by temperature control units to a semimolten state. As the print head traces the design of each defined cross-sectional layer horizontally, the semimolten materials are extruded out of the nozzle and solidified in the desired areas. The stage then lowers and another layer is deposited in the same way. These steps are repeated to fabricate a 3D structure in a layer-by-layer manner. The outline of the part is usually printed first, with the internal structures (2D plane) printed layer by layer. Surface defects from this particular process include staircase and chordal effects resulting from the nature of the slicing software and .STL file format. Internal defects can result from heterogeneities in the filament feed diameter and density, as these can effect how the material is extruded from the printer nozzle.
A notable advantage of FDM is that it can create objects fabricated from multiple material types by printing and subsequently changing the print material, which enables more user control over device fabrication for experimental use. Besides conventional materials such as PC, polystyrene (PS), and ABS, FDM can also print 3D models out of glass reinforced polymers, metal, ceramics, and bioresorbable materials. However, a binder is typically mixed with ceramic or metal powders, enabling the material to be used in a filament form.

Laminated Object Manufacturing (LOM)
LOM, developed by Helisys, generates a 3D model by stacking layers of defined sheet materials such as paper, plastic, and metal. As shown in the schematics in Figure 5, after the first layer of a sheet material is loaded onto a stage, a laser (CO2 lasers have been used) or razor traces the designed cross-section to define the pattern on the layer. After the excess material of the sheet is removed, a second layer covers the previous layer and the laser or knife tracing will define the next pattern based on information in the .STL file. Adjacent layers are combined by use of adhesives or welding, e.g., for paper or metal, respectively. These steps are repeated to generate a layered 3D model.
The LOM process does require a heating step during production, either on the support stage or on the roller, to ensure that the adhesive acts to bond the sheets together. The effects of this step on the nonuniformities in the fabricated part are, in general, minimal compared to defects that arise in other techniques, such as FDM. However, if the local temperature of either the roller or the stage is not controlled well enough, the part could become delaminated due to inefficient adhesive heating or the part can suffer structural damage if the temperature is high enough to damage the adhesive.(66) Another limitation of LOM is that the materials applicable for method use are limited by their ability to be formed into sheets and to be integrated with adhesive.
Each additive manufacturing technique described above has its own limitations and advantages in producing prototype models. For a better understanding, numerous comparisons of these rapid prototyping techniques have been reported in detail. 

Bethany C. GrossJayda L. ErkalSarah Y. LockwoodChengpeng Chen, and Dana M. Spence*
Department of Chemistry, Michigan State University, 578 South Shaw Lane, East Lansing, Michigan 48824, United States
Anal. Chem., 2014, 86 (7), pp 3240–3253

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