Vat Photopolymerization 3D Printing of Hydrogels with Re-Adjustable Swelling
Author:
Liz-Basteiro Pedro1ORCID, Reviriego Felipe1, Martínez-Campos Enrique12, Reinecke Helmut1, Elvira Carlos1, Rodríguez-Hernández Juan1, Gallardo Alberto1
Affiliation:
1. Instituto de Ciencia y Tecnología de Polímeros (ICTP), CSIC, C/Juan de la Cierva 3, 28006 Madrid, Spain 2. Grupo de Síntesis Orgánica y Bioevaluación, Instituto Pluridisciplinar (IP), UCM, Unidad Asociada al CSIC por el ICTP y el IQM, Paseo de Juan XXIII 1, 28040 Madrid, Spain
Abstract
Vat photopolymerization typically prints highly crosslinked networks. Printing hydrogels, which are also networks but with a high swelling capacity in water and therefore with low crosslinking density, is a challenge for this technique. However, it may be of interest in medicine and in other areas, since it would allow for the preparation of this type of 3D-shaped material. In this work, an approach for printing hydrogels via vat photopolymerization that uses a mixture of stable and hydrolysable crosslinkers has been evaluated so that an initial highly crosslinked network can be printed, although after hydrolysis it becomes a network with low crosslinking. This approach has been studied with PEO/PEG-related formulations, that is, with a PEG-dimethacrylate as a stable crosslinker, a PEO-related derivative carrying β-aminoesters as a degradable crosslinker, and PEG-methyl ether acrylate and hydroxyethyl acrylate as monofunctional monomers. A wide family of formulations has been studied, maintaining the weight percentage of the crosslinkers at 15%. Resins have been studied in terms of viscosity, and the printing process has been evaluated through the generation of Jacobs working curves. It has been shown that this approach allows for the printing of pieces of different shapes and sizes via vat photopolymerization, and that these pieces can re-ajust their water content in a tailored fashion through treatments in different media (PBS or pH 10 buffer).
Funder
Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovación y Universidades
Subject
Polymers and Plastics,Organic Chemistry,Biomaterials,Bioengineering
Reference40 articles.
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