Issue 12, 2020

The emerging role of microfluidics in multi-material 3D bioprinting

Abstract

To assist the transition of 3D bioprinting technology from simple lab-based tissue fabrication, to fully functional and implantable organs, the technology must not only provide shape control, but also functional control. This can be accomplished by replicating the cellular composition of the native tissue at the microscale, such that cell types interact to provide the desired function. There is therefore a need for precise, controllable, multi-material printing that could allow for high, possibly even single cell, resolution. This paper aims to draw attention to technological advancements made in 3D bioprinting that target the lack of multi-material, and/or multi cell-type, printing capabilities of most current devices. Unlike other reviews in the field, which largely focus on variations in single-material 3D bioprinting involving the standard methods of extrusion-based, droplet-based, laser-based, or stereolithographic methods; this review concentrates on sophisticated multi-material 3D bioprinting using multi-cartridge printheads, co-axial nozzles and microfluidic-enhanced printing nozzles.

Graphical abstract: The emerging role of microfluidics in multi-material 3D bioprinting

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Critical Review
Submitted
29 Nov 2019
Accepted
16 May 2020
First published
18 May 2020

Lab Chip, 2020,20, 2044-2056

The emerging role of microfluidics in multi-material 3D bioprinting

C. Richard, A. Neild and V. J. Cadarso, Lab Chip, 2020, 20, 2044 DOI: 10.1039/C9LC01184F

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