A particle-based numerical method for modelling of fluid-structure interactions in biomanufacturing processes

The study of human physiology and target medicine has made a great leap with the discovery of cell culture, an operation under the more general topic of biomanufacturing. One key biomanufacturing technique for the creation of in-vitro three-dimensional tissue models and even diseases is the extrusio...

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Main Author: Lee, Jia Min
Other Authors: Chan Wai Lee
Format: Thesis-Doctor of Philosophy
Language:English
Published: Nanyang Technological University 2023
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/165589
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1655892023-05-02T06:33:01Z A particle-based numerical method for modelling of fluid-structure interactions in biomanufacturing processes Lee, Jia Min Chan Wai Lee School of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering chan.wl@ntu.edu.sg Engineering::Mechanical engineering The study of human physiology and target medicine has made a great leap with the discovery of cell culture, an operation under the more general topic of biomanufacturing. One key biomanufacturing technique for the creation of in-vitro three-dimensional tissue models and even diseases is the extrusion-based bioprinting, but the associated mechanical stresses can become so high that the cell viability significantly decreases. Therefore, methods that can characterize stresses induced in cell-laden bioinks during the printing process are critical to the advancement of bioprinting, ensuring high efficacy in the biomanufacturing technique. In this dissertation, a particle-based numerical method, commonly known as smoothed particle hydrodynamics (SPH), is developed to emulate the fluid-structure interactions between bioink and cells. To represent the cell deformations and motions, the SPH solver is coupled with an element bending group (EBG) model, which treats the cell as a solid membrane with liquid filling. The method is validated through comparison with experimental data on deformations and transport of a MCF7 cancerous cell through a microchannel. Upon validation, the method was applied on a model extrusion-based bioprinting configuration, considering in addition the use of cytoprotective gel particles to encapsulate the cells in the bioink, thereby maintaining a high cell viability. Using the deformations of the gel particles as boundary conditions, flow-induced stresses on the protective encapsulation can be computed by a separate finite element analysis. Stress analysis suggests the presence of a high stress region near the converging section before the bioprinter nozzle outlet, which is the likely cause of low cell viability in extrusion-based bioprinting. The results also indicate that the protective property from the encapsulating gel particles is due to the substitution of flow-induced stresses with internal stresses on the cells, which can be up to 90% less than the former. The findings from this research demonstrate that the two-dimensional SPH-EBG methodology developed here is a promising tool to predict stresses on cells within bioinks. Such a capability will not only facilitate the design of extrusion-based bioprinters, but also be applicable to other biomanufacturing techniques that involve cell-laden flows. Doctor of Philosophy 2023-04-03T03:39:19Z 2023-04-03T03:39:19Z 2023 Thesis-Doctor of Philosophy Lee, J. M. (2023). A particle-based numerical method for modelling of fluid-structure interactions in biomanufacturing processes. Doctoral thesis, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. https://hdl.handle.net/10356/165589 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/165589 10.32657/10356/165589 en This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License (CC BY-NC 4.0). application/pdf Nanyang Technological University
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Engineering::Mechanical engineering
spellingShingle Engineering::Mechanical engineering
Lee, Jia Min
A particle-based numerical method for modelling of fluid-structure interactions in biomanufacturing processes
description The study of human physiology and target medicine has made a great leap with the discovery of cell culture, an operation under the more general topic of biomanufacturing. One key biomanufacturing technique for the creation of in-vitro three-dimensional tissue models and even diseases is the extrusion-based bioprinting, but the associated mechanical stresses can become so high that the cell viability significantly decreases. Therefore, methods that can characterize stresses induced in cell-laden bioinks during the printing process are critical to the advancement of bioprinting, ensuring high efficacy in the biomanufacturing technique. In this dissertation, a particle-based numerical method, commonly known as smoothed particle hydrodynamics (SPH), is developed to emulate the fluid-structure interactions between bioink and cells. To represent the cell deformations and motions, the SPH solver is coupled with an element bending group (EBG) model, which treats the cell as a solid membrane with liquid filling. The method is validated through comparison with experimental data on deformations and transport of a MCF7 cancerous cell through a microchannel. Upon validation, the method was applied on a model extrusion-based bioprinting configuration, considering in addition the use of cytoprotective gel particles to encapsulate the cells in the bioink, thereby maintaining a high cell viability. Using the deformations of the gel particles as boundary conditions, flow-induced stresses on the protective encapsulation can be computed by a separate finite element analysis. Stress analysis suggests the presence of a high stress region near the converging section before the bioprinter nozzle outlet, which is the likely cause of low cell viability in extrusion-based bioprinting. The results also indicate that the protective property from the encapsulating gel particles is due to the substitution of flow-induced stresses with internal stresses on the cells, which can be up to 90% less than the former. The findings from this research demonstrate that the two-dimensional SPH-EBG methodology developed here is a promising tool to predict stresses on cells within bioinks. Such a capability will not only facilitate the design of extrusion-based bioprinters, but also be applicable to other biomanufacturing techniques that involve cell-laden flows.
author2 Chan Wai Lee
author_facet Chan Wai Lee
Lee, Jia Min
format Thesis-Doctor of Philosophy
author Lee, Jia Min
author_sort Lee, Jia Min
title A particle-based numerical method for modelling of fluid-structure interactions in biomanufacturing processes
title_short A particle-based numerical method for modelling of fluid-structure interactions in biomanufacturing processes
title_full A particle-based numerical method for modelling of fluid-structure interactions in biomanufacturing processes
title_fullStr A particle-based numerical method for modelling of fluid-structure interactions in biomanufacturing processes
title_full_unstemmed A particle-based numerical method for modelling of fluid-structure interactions in biomanufacturing processes
title_sort particle-based numerical method for modelling of fluid-structure interactions in biomanufacturing processes
publisher Nanyang Technological University
publishDate 2023
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/165589
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