4D printing and stimuli-responsive materials in biomedical aspects

Three-dimensional (3D) printing has revolutionized the world manufacturing production. In biomedical applications, however, 3D printed constructs fell short of expectations mainly due to their inability to adequately mimic the dynamic human tissues. To date, most of the 3D printed biomedical structu...

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Main Authors: Lui, Yuan Siang, Sow, Wan Ting, Tan, Lay Poh, Wu, Yunlong, Lai, Yuekun, Li, Huaqiong
Other Authors: School of Materials Science and Engineering
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2020
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/143207
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1432072023-07-14T15:59:12Z 4D printing and stimuli-responsive materials in biomedical aspects Lui, Yuan Siang Sow, Wan Ting Tan, Lay Poh Wu, Yunlong Lai, Yuekun Li, Huaqiong School of Materials Science and Engineering Engineering::Materials 4D Printing Responsive Materials Three-dimensional (3D) printing has revolutionized the world manufacturing production. In biomedical applications, however, 3D printed constructs fell short of expectations mainly due to their inability to adequately mimic the dynamic human tissues. To date, most of the 3D printed biomedical structures are largely static and inanimate as they lack the time-dependant dimension. To adequately address the dynamic healing and regeneration process of human tissues, 4D printing emerges as an important development where "time" is incorporated into the conventional concept of 3D printing as the fourth dimension. As such, additive manufacturing (AM) evolves from 3D to 4D printing and in the process putting stimulus-responsive materials in the limelight. In this review, the state-of-the-art efforts in integrating the time-dependent behaviour of stimulus-responsive materials in 4D printing will be discussed. In addition, current literatures on the interactions between various types of stimuli (categorized under physical, chemical and biological signals) with the associated stimulus-responsive materials will be the major focus in this review. Lastly, potential usage of 4D printing in biomedical applications will also be discussed, followed by technical considerations as well as outlook for future discoveries. STATEMENT OF SIGNIFICANCE: In this Review, we have demonstrated the significance of 4D printing in biomedical applications, in which "time" has been incorporated into the conventional concept of 3D printing as the 4th dimension. As such, 4D printing differentiates and evolves from 3D printing using stimulus-responsive materials which can actively respond to external stimuli and more sophisticated "hardware"-printer which can achieve multi-printing via mathematical-predicted designs that are programmed to consider the transformation of 3D constructs over time. The emphasize will be on the interactions between various types of stimuli (categorized under physical, chemical and biological signals) with the associated stimulus-responsive materials, followed by technical considerations as well as outlook for future discoveries. Accepted version 2020-08-12T06:52:33Z 2020-08-12T06:52:33Z 2019 Journal Article Lui, Y. S., Sow, W. T., Tan, L. P., Wu, Y., Lai, Y., & Li, H. (2019). 4D printing and stimuli-responsive materials in biomedical aspects. Acta Biomaterialia, 92, 19-36. doi:10.1016/j.actbio.2019.05.005 1742-7061 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/143207 10.1016/j.actbio.2019.05.005 31071476 2-s2.0-85065246211 92 19 36 en Acta Biomaterialia © 2019 Acta Materialia Inc. All rights reserved. This paper was published by Elsevier Ltd. in Acta Biomaterialia and is made available with permission of Acta Materialia Inc. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Engineering::Materials
4D Printing
Responsive Materials
spellingShingle Engineering::Materials
4D Printing
Responsive Materials
Lui, Yuan Siang
Sow, Wan Ting
Tan, Lay Poh
Wu, Yunlong
Lai, Yuekun
Li, Huaqiong
4D printing and stimuli-responsive materials in biomedical aspects
description Three-dimensional (3D) printing has revolutionized the world manufacturing production. In biomedical applications, however, 3D printed constructs fell short of expectations mainly due to their inability to adequately mimic the dynamic human tissues. To date, most of the 3D printed biomedical structures are largely static and inanimate as they lack the time-dependant dimension. To adequately address the dynamic healing and regeneration process of human tissues, 4D printing emerges as an important development where "time" is incorporated into the conventional concept of 3D printing as the fourth dimension. As such, additive manufacturing (AM) evolves from 3D to 4D printing and in the process putting stimulus-responsive materials in the limelight. In this review, the state-of-the-art efforts in integrating the time-dependent behaviour of stimulus-responsive materials in 4D printing will be discussed. In addition, current literatures on the interactions between various types of stimuli (categorized under physical, chemical and biological signals) with the associated stimulus-responsive materials will be the major focus in this review. Lastly, potential usage of 4D printing in biomedical applications will also be discussed, followed by technical considerations as well as outlook for future discoveries. STATEMENT OF SIGNIFICANCE: In this Review, we have demonstrated the significance of 4D printing in biomedical applications, in which "time" has been incorporated into the conventional concept of 3D printing as the 4th dimension. As such, 4D printing differentiates and evolves from 3D printing using stimulus-responsive materials which can actively respond to external stimuli and more sophisticated "hardware"-printer which can achieve multi-printing via mathematical-predicted designs that are programmed to consider the transformation of 3D constructs over time. The emphasize will be on the interactions between various types of stimuli (categorized under physical, chemical and biological signals) with the associated stimulus-responsive materials, followed by technical considerations as well as outlook for future discoveries.
author2 School of Materials Science and Engineering
author_facet School of Materials Science and Engineering
Lui, Yuan Siang
Sow, Wan Ting
Tan, Lay Poh
Wu, Yunlong
Lai, Yuekun
Li, Huaqiong
format Article
author Lui, Yuan Siang
Sow, Wan Ting
Tan, Lay Poh
Wu, Yunlong
Lai, Yuekun
Li, Huaqiong
author_sort Lui, Yuan Siang
title 4D printing and stimuli-responsive materials in biomedical aspects
title_short 4D printing and stimuli-responsive materials in biomedical aspects
title_full 4D printing and stimuli-responsive materials in biomedical aspects
title_fullStr 4D printing and stimuli-responsive materials in biomedical aspects
title_full_unstemmed 4D printing and stimuli-responsive materials in biomedical aspects
title_sort 4d printing and stimuli-responsive materials in biomedical aspects
publishDate 2020
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/143207
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