4.8 Review

Associative Liquid-In-Liquid 3D Printing Techniques for Freeform Fabrication of Soft Matter

Journal

SMALL
Volume 19, Issue 16, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/smll.202206524

Keywords

freeform manufacturing; interfacial assembly; liquid-in-liquid 3D printing; soft matter

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Liquid-in-liquid 3D printing techniques that rely on the interaction or association of two liquid phases have been developed for fabricating complex structures from a wide range of soft materials. This review article provides an overview of these techniques, including their fundamentals, underlying mechanisms, characterization techniques for structural stability assurance, and practical properties of prints. The future paths and potential applications are also discussed.
Shaping soft materials into prescribed 3D complex designs has been challenging yet feasible using various 3D printing technologies. For a broader range of soft matters to be printable, liquid-in-liquid 3D printing techniques have emerged in which an ink phase is printed into 3D constructs within a bath. Most of the attention in this field has been focused on using a support bath with favorable rheology (i.e., shear-thinning behavior) which limits the selection of materials, impeding the broad application of such techniques. However, a growing body of work has begun to leverage the interaction or association of the two involved phases (specifically at the liquid-liquid interface) to fabricate complex constructs from a myriad of soft materials with practical structural, mechanical, optical, magnetic, and communicative properties. This review article has provided an overview of the studies on such associative liquid-in-liquid 3D printing techniques along with their fundamentals, underlying mechanisms, various characterization techniques used for ensuring the structural stability, and practical properties of prints. Also, the future paths with the potential applications are discussed.

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