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Digital light processing 3D printing of dynamic magneto-responsive thiol-acrylate composites

Additive manufacturing is one of the most promising processing techniques for fabricating customized 3D objects. For the 3D printing of functional and stimuli-triggered devices, interest is steadily growing in processing materials with magnetic properties. Synthesis routes for magneto-responsive sof...

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Autores principales: Cazin, Ines, Rossegger, Elisabeth, Roppolo, Ignazio, Sangermano, Marco, Granitzer, Petra, Rumpf, Klemens, Schlögl, Sandra
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Royal Society of Chemistry 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10253501/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37304810
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d3ra02504g
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author Cazin, Ines
Rossegger, Elisabeth
Roppolo, Ignazio
Sangermano, Marco
Granitzer, Petra
Rumpf, Klemens
Schlögl, Sandra
author_facet Cazin, Ines
Rossegger, Elisabeth
Roppolo, Ignazio
Sangermano, Marco
Granitzer, Petra
Rumpf, Klemens
Schlögl, Sandra
author_sort Cazin, Ines
collection PubMed
description Additive manufacturing is one of the most promising processing techniques for fabricating customized 3D objects. For the 3D printing of functional and stimuli-triggered devices, interest is steadily growing in processing materials with magnetic properties. Synthesis routes for magneto-responsive soft materials typically involve the dispersion of (nano)particles into a non-magnetic polymer matrix. Above their glass transition temperature, the shape of such composites can be conveniently adjusted by applying an external magnetic field. With their rapid response time, facile controllability, and reversible actuation, magnetically responsive soft materials can be used in the biomedical field (e.g. drug delivery, minimally invasive surgery), soft robotics or in electronic applications. Herein, we combine the magnetic response with thermo-activated healability by introducing magnetic Fe(3)O(4) nanoparticles into a dynamic photopolymer network, which undergoes thermo-activated bond exchange reactions. The resin is based on a radically curable thiol-acrylate system, whose composition is optimized towards processability via digital light processing 3D printing. A mono-functional methacrylate phosphate is applied as a stabilizer to increase the resins' shelf life by preventing thiol-Michael reactions. Once photocured, the organic phosphate further acts as a transesterification catalyst and activates bond exchange reactions at elevated temperature, which render the magneto-active composites mendable and malleable. The healing performance is demonstrated by recovering magnetic and mechanical properties after the thermally triggered mending of 3D-printed structures. We further demonstrate the magnetically driven movement of 3D-printed samples, which gives rise to the potential use of these materials in healable soft devices activated by external magnetic fields.
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spelling pubmed-102535012023-06-10 Digital light processing 3D printing of dynamic magneto-responsive thiol-acrylate composites Cazin, Ines Rossegger, Elisabeth Roppolo, Ignazio Sangermano, Marco Granitzer, Petra Rumpf, Klemens Schlögl, Sandra RSC Adv Chemistry Additive manufacturing is one of the most promising processing techniques for fabricating customized 3D objects. For the 3D printing of functional and stimuli-triggered devices, interest is steadily growing in processing materials with magnetic properties. Synthesis routes for magneto-responsive soft materials typically involve the dispersion of (nano)particles into a non-magnetic polymer matrix. Above their glass transition temperature, the shape of such composites can be conveniently adjusted by applying an external magnetic field. With their rapid response time, facile controllability, and reversible actuation, magnetically responsive soft materials can be used in the biomedical field (e.g. drug delivery, minimally invasive surgery), soft robotics or in electronic applications. Herein, we combine the magnetic response with thermo-activated healability by introducing magnetic Fe(3)O(4) nanoparticles into a dynamic photopolymer network, which undergoes thermo-activated bond exchange reactions. The resin is based on a radically curable thiol-acrylate system, whose composition is optimized towards processability via digital light processing 3D printing. A mono-functional methacrylate phosphate is applied as a stabilizer to increase the resins' shelf life by preventing thiol-Michael reactions. Once photocured, the organic phosphate further acts as a transesterification catalyst and activates bond exchange reactions at elevated temperature, which render the magneto-active composites mendable and malleable. The healing performance is demonstrated by recovering magnetic and mechanical properties after the thermally triggered mending of 3D-printed structures. We further demonstrate the magnetically driven movement of 3D-printed samples, which gives rise to the potential use of these materials in healable soft devices activated by external magnetic fields. The Royal Society of Chemistry 2023-06-09 /pmc/articles/PMC10253501/ /pubmed/37304810 http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d3ra02504g Text en This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/
spellingShingle Chemistry
Cazin, Ines
Rossegger, Elisabeth
Roppolo, Ignazio
Sangermano, Marco
Granitzer, Petra
Rumpf, Klemens
Schlögl, Sandra
Digital light processing 3D printing of dynamic magneto-responsive thiol-acrylate composites
title Digital light processing 3D printing of dynamic magneto-responsive thiol-acrylate composites
title_full Digital light processing 3D printing of dynamic magneto-responsive thiol-acrylate composites
title_fullStr Digital light processing 3D printing of dynamic magneto-responsive thiol-acrylate composites
title_full_unstemmed Digital light processing 3D printing of dynamic magneto-responsive thiol-acrylate composites
title_short Digital light processing 3D printing of dynamic magneto-responsive thiol-acrylate composites
title_sort digital light processing 3d printing of dynamic magneto-responsive thiol-acrylate composites
topic Chemistry
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10253501/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37304810
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d3ra02504g
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