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      Additive Manufacturing of Precision Biomaterials

      1 ,   1
      Advanced Materials
      Wiley

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          Abstract

          Biomaterials play a critical role in modern medicine as surgical guides, implants for tissue repair, and as drug delivery systems. The emerging paradigm of precision medicine exploits individual patient information to tailor clinical therapy. While the main focus of precision medicine to date is the design of improved pharmaceutical treatments based on "-omics" data, the concept extends to all forms of customized medical care. This includes the design of precision biomaterials that are tailored to meet specific patient needs. Additive manufacturing (AM) enables free-form manufacturing and mass customization, and is a critical enabling technology for the clinical implementation of precision biomaterials. Materials scientists and engineers can contribute to the realization of precision biomaterials by developing new AM technologies, synthesizing advanced (bio)materials for AM, and improving medical-image-based digital design. As the field matures, AM is poised to provide patient-specific tissue and organ substitutes, reproducible microtissues for drug screening and disease modeling, personalized drug delivery systems, as well as customized medical devices.

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          Most cited references152

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          Electrospinning of Nanofibers: Reinventing the Wheel?

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            3D printing of polymer matrix composites: A review and prospective

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              Additive manufacturing. Continuous liquid interface production of 3D objects.

              Additive manufacturing processes such as 3D printing use time-consuming, stepwise layer-by-layer approaches to object fabrication. We demonstrate the continuous generation of monolithic polymeric parts up to tens of centimeters in size with feature resolution below 100 micrometers. Continuous liquid interface production is achieved with an oxygen-permeable window below the ultraviolet image projection plane, which creates a "dead zone" (persistent liquid interface) where photopolymerization is inhibited between the window and the polymerizing part. We delineate critical control parameters and show that complex solid parts can be drawn out of the resin at rates of hundreds of millimeters per hour. These print speeds allow parts to be produced in minutes instead of hours.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Advanced Materials
                Adv. Mater.
                Wiley
                0935-9648
                1521-4095
                August 18 2019
                August 18 2019
                : 1901994
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Macromolecular Engineering LaboratoryDepartment of Mechanical and Process EngineeringETH Zürich 8092 Zürich Switzerland
                Article
                10.1002/adma.201901994
                31423679
                2ff04a24-7c80-4cbb-9362-5b630d2565de
                © 2019

                http://doi.wiley.com/10.1002/tdm_license_1.1

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