Technology Overview:
The Burdick Lab has developed a new method of printing 3D structures using supramolecular hydrogels. These gels are both shear-thinning and rapidly self-healing. The shear-thinning feature allows for the material in gel or solid form to be forced through a channel (as in a needle), causing bond dissociation and thus allowing for the material to behave in a fluid-like fashion. Because the gel is self-healing, once the needle is removed, the bonds re-form and stabilize the structure. This mechanism enables the printing of channel-like structures, overhangs, spiral, spherical pockets of material. Supramolecular hydrogels are versatile and can be combined with biological components such as cells to print high resolution, tissue-like structures, that could be used as models of healthy and diseased tissues for biological research, drug screening, and as therapeutic implants for damaged tissues. The combination of resolution, ability to address 3D space and flexibility in printed materials is currently unmatched by other 3D printing technologies.
Advantages:
Stage of Development:
Intellectual Property:
US 10,828,399
Reference Media:
Highley CB et al. Advanced Materials, 2015 Sept 9, 27(34): 5075
Desired Partnerships:
Docket # 15-7350