Toughening 3D printed biomimetic hydroxyapatite scaffolds: polycaprolactone-based self-hardening inks
Cita com:
hdl:2117/404879
CovenanteeInstitut de Recerca Sant Joan de Déu; Mimetis Biomaterials; Centro de Investigación Biomédica en Red. Bioingeniería, Biomateriales y Nanomedicina; Institut de Bioenginyeria de Catalunya
Document typeArticle
Defense date2024-02
PublisherElsevier
Rights accessOpen Access
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Attribution 4.0 International
Abstract
The application of 3D printing to calcium phosphates has opened unprecedented possibilities for the fabrication of personalized bone grafts. However, their biocompatibility and bioactivity are counterbalanced by their high brittleness. In this work we aim at overcoming this problem by developing a self-hardening ink containing reactive ceramic particles in a polycaprolactone solution instead of the traditional approach that use hydrogels as binders. The presence of polycaprolactone preserved the printability of the ink and was compatible with the hydrolysis-based hardening process, despite the absence of water in the ink and its hydrophobicity. The microstructure evolved from a continuous polymeric phase with loose ceramic particles to a continuous network of hydroxyapatite nanocrystals intertwined with the polymer, in a configuration radically different from the polymer/ceramic composites obtained by fused deposition modelling. This resulted in the evolution from a ductile behavior, dominated by the polymer, to a stiffer behavior as the ceramic phase reacted. The polycaprolactone binder provides two highly relevant benefits compared to hydrogel-based inks. First, the handleability and elasticity of the as-printed scaffolds, together with the proven possibility of eliminating the solvent, opens the door to implanting the scaffolds freshly printed once lyophilized, while in a ductile state, and the hardening process to take place inside the body, as in the case of calcium phosphate cements. Second, even with a hydroxyapatite content of more than 92%, the flexural strength and toughness of the scaffolds after hardening are twice and five times those of the all-ceramic scaffolds obtained with the hydrogel-based inks, respectively.
CitationDel Mazo, L. [et al.]. Toughening 3D printed biomimetic hydroxyapatite scaffolds: polycaprolactone-based self-hardening inks. "Acta biomaterialia", Febrer 2024, vol. 177, p. 506-524.
ISSN1878-7568
Publisher versionhttps://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1742706124000710
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