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SCIENCE
INDEX
2000
2001
2002
Materials Science
Colloidal inks form
self-supporting scaffolds through robocasting
James
E. Kloeppel, Physical Sciences Editor
(217) 244-1073; kloeppel@uiuc.edu
6/19/02
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Photo
by Bill Wiegand
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| Jennifer
Lewis, professor of materials science and engineering, and
colleagues have devised a new
way to assemble complex, three-dimensional structures from
specially formulated colloidal inks that could find use in
advanced ceramics, sensors, composites, catalyst supports,
tissue engineering scaffolds and photonic materials. |
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CHAMPAIGN, Ill.
A new way to
assemble complex, three-dimensional structures from specially formulated
colloidal inks could find use in advanced ceramics, sensors, composites,
catalyst supports, tissue engineering scaffolds and photonic materials.
As will be reported in the July 9 issue of the journal Langmuir, scientists
have developed colloidal, gel-based inks that form self-supporting features
through a robotic deposition process called robocasting. A computer-controlled
robot squeezes the ink out of a syringe, almost like a cake decorator,
building the desired structure layer by layer.
"Our goal is to make designer materials that can't be made by conventional
forming techniques," said Jennifer Lewis, a professor of materials
science and engineering and of chemical engineering at the University
of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.
The work is a collaboration between Lewis, Illinois graduate student
James Smay, and Joseph Cesarano, a staff scientist at the U.S. Department
of Energys Sandia National Laboratories in Albuquerque, N.M.
Cesarano pioneered the concept of robocasting several years ago and
implemented it as an alternative "rapid prototyping" method
for producing ceramic components. The Illinois-Sandia group is advancing
the technique to finer scales and designing special inks that can form
self-supporting features.
"The directed assembly of fine-scale, three-dimensional structures
containing spanning elements required the development of concentrated
colloidal, gel-based inks," Lewis said. "These inks must first
flow through a very fine deposition nozzle and then quickly 'set' to
maintain their shape while simultaneously bonding to the underlying
layer."
The researchers have created structures with features as small as 100
microns (about the diameter of a human hair) and have spanned gaps as
large as 2 millimeters.
The elastic properties and the viscous response of the ink can be "tuned"
by tailoring the strength of the interparticle attractions, Lewis said.
Because of the dynamic nature of the resulting gel, the particle network
forms very quickly after the ink is pushed through the syringe, providing
the desired shape retention.
Through careful control of colloidal forces, the researchers not only
can produce complex shapes that cant be made by conventional molding
or extrusion processes, they also can build in complexity with respect
to chemical composition.
"The robotic deposition equipment has the capability of handling
multiple inks and dispensing them simultaneously," Lewis said.
"As the relative rates of deposited ink are regulated, structures
can be built that have compositional variations in them."
Inks are housed in separate syringes mounted on the robotic deposition
apparatus and can be mixed or deposited independently. The ink exits
the nozzle as a continuous, rod-like filament that is deposited onto
a moving platform, yielding a two-dimensional pattern. After a layer
is generated, the stage is raised and another layer is deposited. This
process is repeated until the desired structure is produced.
The machines motion is controlled by a computer program called
RoboCAD, developed by Smay. The software allows users to rapidly design
and build complex, three-dimensional structures by simply designing
layers as two-dimensional drawings.
"Ink can be made from nearly any particulate material that can
be suspended in solution, as long as the interparticle forces can be
tuned to yield the desired viscoelastic response," Lewis said.
"We have made inks out of silica, alumina, lead zirconate titanate,
and hydroxyapatite (the basic inorganic constituent of bone) colloidal
particles. We also can deposit polymeric, metallic, and semiconducting
colloidal inks."
The National Science Foundation and the Department of Energy funded
this work.
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