The reversible fluid-solid transition in granular gels enables the three-dimensional writing of soft, delicate, macroscopic structures with microscopic detail. Gels made from soft microscale particles smoothly transition between the fluid and solid states, making them an ideal medium in which to create macroscopic structures with microscopic precision. While tracing out spatial paths with an injection tip, the granular gel fluidizes at the point of injection and then rapidly solidifies, trapping injected material in place. This physical approach to creating three-dimensional (3D) structures negates the effects of surface tension, gravity, and particle diffusion, allowing a limitless breadth of materials to be written. With this method, we used silicones, hydrogels, colloids, and living cells to create complex large aspect ratio 3D objects, thin closed shells, and hierarchically branched tubular networks. We crosslinked polymeric materials and removed them from the granular gel, whereas uncrosslinked particulate systems were left supported within the medium for long times. This approach can be immediately used in diverse areas, contributing to tissue engineering, flexible electronics, particle engineering, smart materials, and encapsulation technologies.
Writing in the granular gel medium
Tapomoy Bhattacharjee,S. Zehnder,Kyle Rowe,Suhani Jain,R. Nixon,W. Sawyer,Thomas E. Angelini
Published 2015 in Science Advances
ABSTRACT
PUBLICATION RECORD
- Publication year
2015
- Venue
Science Advances
- Publication date
2015-09-01
- Fields of study
Materials Science, Physics, Computer Science, Engineering, Medicine
- Identifiers
- External record
- Source metadata
Semantic Scholar, PubMed
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