4.7 Article

A 'print-pause-print' protocol for 3D printing microfluidics using multimaterial stereolithography

Journal

NATURE PROTOCOLS
Volume 18, Issue 4, Pages 1243-+

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41596-022-00792-6

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Methods using 3D printers to make microfluidic chips have gained much attention for their simple procedures and minimal human intervention. Challenges lie in printing high-resolution chips that are transparent, biocompatible, and contain regions of dissimilar materials. The 'print-pause-print' protocol demonstrates strategies for fabricating transparent biomicrofluidic devices and multimaterial chips. The procedure takes less than 1 hour and enables various chip-based applications.
Methods to make microfluidic chips using 3D printers have attracted much attention because these simple procedures allow rapid fabrication of ready-to-use products from digital 3D designs with minimal human intervention. Printing high-resolution chips that are simultaneously transparent, biocompatible and contain regions of dissimilar materials is an ongoing challenge. Transparency allows for the optical inspection of specimens containing cells and labeled biomolecules inside the chip. Being able to use different materials for different layers in the product increases the number of potential applications. In this 'print-pause-print' protocol, we describe detailed strategies for fabricating transparent biomicrofluidic devices and multimaterial chips using stereolithographic 3D printing. To print transparent biomicrofluidic chips, we developed a transparent resin based on poly(ethylene glycol) diacrylate (PEG-DA) (average molecular weight: 250 g/mol, PEG-DA-250) and a smooth chip surface technique achieved using glass. Cells can be successfully cultured and visualized on PEG-DA-250 prints and inside PEG-DA-250 microchannels. The multimaterial potential of the technique is exemplified using a molecular diffusion device that comprises parts made of two different materials: the channel walls, which are water impermeable, and a porous barrier structure, which is permeable to small molecules that diffuse through it. The two materials were prepared from two different molecular-weight PEG-DA-based printing resins. Alignment of the two dissimilar material structures is performed automatically by the printer during the printing process, which only requires a simple pause step to exchange the resins. The procedure takes less than 1 h and can facilitate chip-based applications including biomolecule analysis, cell biology, organ-on-a-chip and tissue engineering.

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