Improved fabrication of melt electrospun tissue engineering scaffolds using direct writing and advanced electric field control
Data(s) |
25/03/2015
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Resumo |
Direct writing melt electrospinning is an additive manufacturing technique capable of the layer-by-layer fabrication of highly ordered 3d tissue engineering scaffolds from micron-diameter fibres. The utility of these scaffolds, however, is limited by the maximum achievable height of controlled fibre deposition, beyond which the structure becomes increasingly disordered. A source of this disorder is charge build-up on the deposited polymer producing unwanted coulombic forces. In this study we introduce a novel melt electrospinning platform with dual voltage power supplies to reduce undesirable charge effects and improve fibre deposition control. We produced and characterised several 90° cross-hatched fibre scaffolds using a range of needle/collector plate voltages. Fibre thickness was found to be sensitive only to overall potential and invariant to specific tip/collector voltage. We also produced ordered scaffolds up to 200 layers thick (fibre spacing 1 mm, diameter 40 μm) and characterised structure in terms of three distinct zones; ordered, semi-ordered and disordered. Our in vitro analysis indicates successful cell attachment and distribution throughout the scaffolds, with little evidence of cell death after seven days. This study demonstrates the importance of electrostatic control for reducing destabilising polymer charge effects and enabling the fabrication of morphologically suitable scaffolds for tissue engineering. |
Formato |
application/pdf |
Identificador | |
Publicador |
American Institute of Physics |
Relação |
http://eprints.qut.edu.au/81321/3/FINAL_BiointerphasesPaper_Reviewed%20%281%29.pdf http://scitation.aip.org/content/avs/journal/bip/10/1/10.1116/1.4914380 DOI:10.1116/1.4914380 Ristovski, Nikola, Bock, Nathalie, Liao, Sam, Powell, Sean K., Ren, Jiongyu (Edward), Kirby, Giles, Blackwood, Keith A., & Woodruff, Maria A. (2015) Improved fabrication of melt electrospun tissue engineering scaffolds using direct writing and advanced electric field control. Biointerphases, 10(1), pp. 1-10. http://purl.org/au-research/grants/ARC/LP130100461 http://purl.org/au-research/grants/ARC/LP110200082 |
Direitos |
Copyright 2015 American Vacuum Society |
Fonte |
School of Chemistry, Physics & Mechanical Engineering; Institute of Health and Biomedical Innovation; Science & Engineering Faculty |
Palavras-Chave | #electrodeposition #cell growth #polymers #tissue engineering #infilitration |
Tipo |
Journal Article |