Fabricating Lattice Structures via 3D Printing: The Case of Porous Bio-Engineered Scaffolds
Over time, the fabrication of lattice, porous structures has always been a controversial field for researchers and practitioners. Such structures could be fabricated in a stochastic way, thus, with limited control over the actual porosity percentage. The emerging technology of 3D printing, offered a...
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doaj-657cfefde1d34780af42c53242801c062021-06-01T01:00:20ZengMDPI AGApplied Mechanics2673-31612021-05-0121828930210.3390/applmech2020018Fabricating Lattice Structures via 3D Printing: The Case of Porous Bio-Engineered ScaffoldsAntreas Kantaros0Dimitrios Piromalis1Department of Industrial Design and Production Engineering, University of West Attica, 12241 Athens, GreeceDepartment of Industrial Design and Production Engineering, University of West Attica, 12241 Athens, GreeceOver time, the fabrication of lattice, porous structures has always been a controversial field for researchers and practitioners. Such structures could be fabricated in a stochastic way, thus, with limited control over the actual porosity percentage. The emerging technology of 3D printing, offered an automated process that did not require the presence of molds and operated on a layer-by-layer deposition basis, provided the ability to fabricate almost any shape through a variety of materials and methods under the umbrella of the ASTM terminology “additive manufacturing”. In the field of biomedical engineering, the technology was embraced and adopted for relevant applications, offering an elevated degree of design freedom. Applications range in the cases where custom-shaped, patient-specific items have to be produced. Scaffold structures were already a field under research when 3D printing was introduced. These structures had to act as biocompatible, bioresorbable and biodegradable substrates, where the human cells could attach and proliferate. In this way, tissue could be regenerated inside the human body. One of the most important criteria for such a structure to fulfil is the case-specific internal geometry design with a controlled porosity percentage. 3D printing technology offered the ability to tune the internal porosity percentage with great accuracy, along with the ability to fabricate any internal design pattern. In this article, lattice scaffold structures for tissue regeneration are overviewed, and their evolution upon the introduction of 3D printing technology and its employment in their fabrication is described.https://www.mdpi.com/2673-3161/2/2/183D printinglattice structurestissue engineeringregenerative medicinescaffold |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Antreas Kantaros Dimitrios Piromalis |
spellingShingle |
Antreas Kantaros Dimitrios Piromalis Fabricating Lattice Structures via 3D Printing: The Case of Porous Bio-Engineered Scaffolds Applied Mechanics 3D printing lattice structures tissue engineering regenerative medicine scaffold |
author_facet |
Antreas Kantaros Dimitrios Piromalis |
author_sort |
Antreas Kantaros |
title |
Fabricating Lattice Structures via 3D Printing: The Case of Porous Bio-Engineered Scaffolds |
title_short |
Fabricating Lattice Structures via 3D Printing: The Case of Porous Bio-Engineered Scaffolds |
title_full |
Fabricating Lattice Structures via 3D Printing: The Case of Porous Bio-Engineered Scaffolds |
title_fullStr |
Fabricating Lattice Structures via 3D Printing: The Case of Porous Bio-Engineered Scaffolds |
title_full_unstemmed |
Fabricating Lattice Structures via 3D Printing: The Case of Porous Bio-Engineered Scaffolds |
title_sort |
fabricating lattice structures via 3d printing: the case of porous bio-engineered scaffolds |
publisher |
MDPI AG |
series |
Applied Mechanics |
issn |
2673-3161 |
publishDate |
2021-05-01 |
description |
Over time, the fabrication of lattice, porous structures has always been a controversial field for researchers and practitioners. Such structures could be fabricated in a stochastic way, thus, with limited control over the actual porosity percentage. The emerging technology of 3D printing, offered an automated process that did not require the presence of molds and operated on a layer-by-layer deposition basis, provided the ability to fabricate almost any shape through a variety of materials and methods under the umbrella of the ASTM terminology “additive manufacturing”. In the field of biomedical engineering, the technology was embraced and adopted for relevant applications, offering an elevated degree of design freedom. Applications range in the cases where custom-shaped, patient-specific items have to be produced. Scaffold structures were already a field under research when 3D printing was introduced. These structures had to act as biocompatible, bioresorbable and biodegradable substrates, where the human cells could attach and proliferate. In this way, tissue could be regenerated inside the human body. One of the most important criteria for such a structure to fulfil is the case-specific internal geometry design with a controlled porosity percentage. 3D printing technology offered the ability to tune the internal porosity percentage with great accuracy, along with the ability to fabricate any internal design pattern. In this article, lattice scaffold structures for tissue regeneration are overviewed, and their evolution upon the introduction of 3D printing technology and its employment in their fabrication is described. |
topic |
3D printing lattice structures tissue engineering regenerative medicine scaffold |
url |
https://www.mdpi.com/2673-3161/2/2/18 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT antreaskantaros fabricatinglatticestructuresvia3dprintingthecaseofporousbioengineeredscaffolds AT dimitriospiromalis fabricatinglatticestructuresvia3dprintingthecaseofporousbioengineeredscaffolds |
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