Tissue engineering techniques are central for the development of biomedical scaffolds, which are primarily employed in the biofabrication of various artificial human tissue and organ models. Bioprinting is a new technique of creating tissue constructs that can sustain cell proliferation. The development of printing techniques proceeds together with the development of the biomaterials to be printed, which is why studying the printability of these specific biomaterials must be explored. An appropriate hydrogel used as bioink should have numerous rheological, mechanical, and biological properties for producing appropriate tissue constructs. However, reaching the right trade-off between a desirable bioactivity and high printability is challenging, and despite numerous optimization studies for different materials, printing defects often occur during printing. Herein, methods are proposed to automatically identify these drifting processes in commonly used geometries and how they affected subsequent layers, as well as printing defects within each layer. Several structures were printed with standard commercial bioink as proof of concept. The constructs were analyzed using optical images from a coaxial camera. The images were then digitally processed to get geometrical data from which patterns of defectology to be monitored were derived. This automation should decrease the time in post-processing characterization of constructs and should provide a standardized tool to compare different bioinks.

In-situ monitoring of defects in extrusion-based bioprinting processes using visible light imaging

Gugliandolo S. G.;Margarita A.;Santoni S.;Moscatelli D.;Colosimo B. M.
2022-01-01

Abstract

Tissue engineering techniques are central for the development of biomedical scaffolds, which are primarily employed in the biofabrication of various artificial human tissue and organ models. Bioprinting is a new technique of creating tissue constructs that can sustain cell proliferation. The development of printing techniques proceeds together with the development of the biomaterials to be printed, which is why studying the printability of these specific biomaterials must be explored. An appropriate hydrogel used as bioink should have numerous rheological, mechanical, and biological properties for producing appropriate tissue constructs. However, reaching the right trade-off between a desirable bioactivity and high printability is challenging, and despite numerous optimization studies for different materials, printing defects often occur during printing. Herein, methods are proposed to automatically identify these drifting processes in commonly used geometries and how they affected subsequent layers, as well as printing defects within each layer. Several structures were printed with standard commercial bioink as proof of concept. The constructs were analyzed using optical images from a coaxial camera. The images were then digitally processed to get geometrical data from which patterns of defectology to be monitored were derived. This automation should decrease the time in post-processing characterization of constructs and should provide a standardized tool to compare different bioinks.
2022
Proceedings of the V CIRP Conference on Biomanufacturing
bioprinting, printability, in-situ monitoring, bioink, quality
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11311/1220270
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