4.6 Review

Multiphoton Laser Fabrication of Hybrid Photo-Activable Biomaterials

Journal

SENSORS
Volume 21, Issue 17, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/s21175891

Keywords

3D printing; hydrogels; photo-polymerization; photo-ablation

Funding

  1. European Union [964481]

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Laser 3D printing and ablation techniques have enabled the creation of stimulus-responsive optical polymers, such as hydrogels, for a variety of applications including imaging, thermal stimulation, and sensing. Embedding active nanomaterials in microstructures can provide biocompatible structures with physically or chemically activatable features, contributing to advancements in nanomedicine and personalized medicine micro-devices.
The possibility to shape stimulus-responsive optical polymers, especially hydrogels, by means of laser 3D printing and ablation is fostering a new concept of smart micro-devices that can be used for imaging, thermal stimulation, energy transducing and sensing. The composition of these polymeric blends is an essential parameter to tune their properties as actuators and/or sensing platforms and to determine the elasto-mechanical characteristics of the printed hydrogel. In light of the increasing demand for micro-devices for nanomedicine and personalized medicine, interest is growing in the combination of composite and hybrid photo-responsive materials and digital micro-/nano-manufacturing. Existing works have exploited multiphoton laser photo-polymerization to obtain fine 3D microstructures in hydrogels in an additive manufacturing approach or exploited laser ablation of preformed hydrogels to carve 3D cavities. Less often, the two approaches have been combined and active nanomaterials have been embedded in the microstructures. The aim of this review is to give a short overview of the most recent and prominent results in the field of multiphoton laser direct writing of biocompatible hydrogels that embed active nanomaterials not interfering with the writing process and endowing the biocompatible microstructures with physically or chemically activable features such as photothermal activity, chemical swelling and chemical sensing.

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