© Harvard University |
The
latest creation from scientists at Harvard marks a new chapter in
biology-inspired engineering. Two teams of scientists worked together to
advance 3D microscale printing capabilities with a product that is responsive
to time.
Scientists
at the Wyss Institute for Biologically Inspired Engineering at Harvard University,
and the Harvard John A. Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Sciences,
have taken their 3D printing technology up a level – to the fourth dimension.
Their
biology-inspired creation attempts to mimic natural structures that are able to
change form in response to their environment. The Harvard scientists unveiled a
“hydrogel composite structure” that resembles an orchid and can change shape
when submerged in water.
“This
work represents an elegant advance in programmable materials assembly, made
possible by a multidisciplinary approach,” senior author of the study Jennifer
Lewis said. “We have now gone beyond integrating form and function to create
transformable architectures.”
The
4D-printed orchids are programmed with precise and localized swelling, and
contain cellulose fibrils, or tiny fibers, from wood. They are meant to
function in place of the microstructures that enable plants to change shapes.
The outcome is that the make-up of the orchid responds to water – the stimuli –
much the same as a typical plant organ such as tendrils, leaves, or flowers
might.
As
the first layer of the liquid-like hydrogel is laid by the printer, it quickly
hardens as the cellulose fibrils are aligned and the composite ink is encoded
with directionally-dependent stiffness and swelling. They are then formed into
a pattern that results in the orchid’s ability to take intricate shapes. Not
only is the orchid then able to move in varied directions, but it can be
predicted and controlled.
As
the scientists point out in the Harvard Gazette, “The new method opens up new
potential applications for 4D printing technology, including smart textiles,
soft electronics, biomedical devices, and tissue engineering.”
The results of this
innovation are dependent on the materials used, and can be tuned to be more
conductive of electricity or for more biocompatability. “We can control the
curvature both discretely and continuously using our entirely tunable and
programmable method,” said Elisabetta Matsumoto, a co-lead author.
This series of images shows the transformation of a 4D-printed hydrogel composite structure after its submersion in water. Credit: Wyss Institute at Harvard University |
Materials
science and mathematics combine to enable the printing of shapeshifting
architectures that mimic the natural movements of plants
A
team of scientists at the Wyss Institute for Biologically Inspired Engineering
at Harvard University and the Harvard John A. Paulson School of Engineering and
Applied Sciences has evolved their microscale 3D printing technology to the
fourth dimension, time. Inspired by natural structures like plants, which respond
and change their form over time according to environmental stimuli, the team
has unveiled 4D-printed hydrogel composite structures that change shape upon
immersion in water.
"This
work represents an elegant advance in programmable materials assembly, made
possible by a multidisciplinary approach," said Jennifer Lewis, Sc.D.,
senior author on the new study. "We have now gone beyond integrating form
and function to create transformable architectures."
Lewis
is a Core Faculty member at the Wyss Institute for Biologically Inspired
Engineering at Harvard University and the Hansjörg Wyss Professor of
Biologically Inspired Engineering at the Harvard John A. Paulson School of
Engineering and Applied Science (SEAS). L. Mahadevan, Ph.D., a Wyss Core
Faculty member as well as the Lola England de Valpine Professor of Applied
Mathematics, Professor of Organismic and Evolutionary Biology, and Professor of
Physics at Harvard University and Harvard SEAS, is a co-author on the study.
Their team also includes co-author, Ralph Nuzzo, Ph.D., the G.L. Clark
Professor of Chemistry at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.
In
nature, flowers and plants have tissue compositions and microstructures that
result in dynamic morphologies that change according to their environments.
Mimicking the variety of shape changes undergone by plant organs such as
tendrils, leaves, and flowers in response to environmental stimuli like
humidity and/or temperature, the 4D-printed hydrogel composites developed by
Lewis and her team are programmed to contain precise, localized swelling
behaviors. Importantly, the hydrogel composites contain cellulose fibrils that
are derived from wood and are similar to the microstructures that enable shape
changes in plants.
Reported
on January 25 in a new study in Nature Materials, the 4D printing advance combined
materials science and mathematics through the involvement of the study’s
co-lead authors A. Sydney Gladman, who is a graduate research assistant advised
by Lewis and specializing in the printing of polymers and composites at the
Wyss Institute and SEAS, and Elisabetta Matsumoto, Ph.D., who is a postdoctoral
fellow at the Wyss and SEAS advised by Mahadevan and specializing in condensed
matter and material physics.
By
aligning cellulose fibrils during printing, the hydrogel composite ink is
encoded with anisotropic swelling and stiffness, which can be patterned to
produce intricate shape changes. The anisotropic nature of the cellulose
fibrils gives rise to varied directional properties that can be predicted and
controlled. This is the reason that wood can be split easier along the grain
rather than across it. Likewise, when immersed in water, the hydrogel-cellulose
fibril ink undergoes differential swelling behavior along and orthogonal to the
printing path. Combined with a proprietary mathematical model developed by the
team that predicts how a 4D object must be printed to achieve prescribed
transformable shapes, the new method opens up many new and exciting potential
applications for 4D printing technology including smart textiles, soft
electronics, biomedical devices, and tissue engineering.
"Using
one composite ink printed in a single step, we can achieve shape-changing
hydrogel geometries containing more complexity than any other technique, and we
can do so simply by modifying the print path," said Gladman. "What’s
more, we can interchange different materials to tune for properties such as
conductivity or biocompatibility."
The
composite ink that the team uses flows like liquid through the printhead, yet
rapidly solidifies once printed. A variety of hydrogel materials can be used
interchangeably resulting in different stimuli-responsive behaviors, while the
cellulose fibrils can be replaced with other anisotropic fillers of choice, including
conductive fillers.
"Our
mathematical model prescribes the printing pathways required to achieve the
desired shape-transforming response," said Matsumoto. "We can control
the curvature both discretely and continuously using our entirely tunable and
programmable method."
Specifically,
the mathematical modeling solves the "inverse problem", which is the
challenge of being able to predict what the printing toolpath must be in order
to encode swelling behaviors toward achieving a specific desired target shape.
"It
is wonderful to be able to design and realize, in an engineered structure, some
of nature’s solutions," said Mahadevan, who has studied phenomena such as
how botanical tendrils coil, how flowers bloom, and how pine cones open and
close. "By solving the inverse problem, we are now able to
reverse-engineer the problem and determine how to vary local inhomogeneity,
i.e. the spacing between the printed ink filaments, and the anisotropy, i.e.
the direction of these filaments, to control the spatiotemporal response of
these shapeshifting sheets."
"What’s
remarkable about this 4D printing advance made by Jennifer and her team is that
it enables the design of almost any arbitrary, transformable shape from a wide
range of available materials with different properties and potential
applications, truly establishing a new platform for printing self-assembling,
dynamic microscale structures that could be applied to a broad range of
industrial and medical applications," said Wyss Institute Founding
Director Donald Ingber, M.D., Ph.D., who is also the Judah Folkman Professor of Vascular Biology at Harvard Medical
School and the Vascular Biology Program at Boston Children’s Hospital and
Professor of Bioengineering at Harvard SEAS.
This work was supported by funding from the Army Research Office (ARO) and the National Science Foundation’s Materials Research Science and Engineering Centre (MRSEC).
This work was supported by funding from the Army Research Office (ARO) and the National Science Foundation’s Materials Research Science and Engineering Centre (MRSEC).
Originally
published in RT (STORY 1) and Wyss Institute website (STORY 2)
No comments :
Post a Comment