PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Printing 3-D graphene structures for tissue engineering

A new ink formulation allows for the 3-D printing of graphene structures

2015-05-19
(Press-News.org) Ever since single-layer graphene burst onto the science scene in 2004, the possibilities for the promising material have seemed nearly endless. With its high electrical conductivity, ability to store energy, and ultra-strong and lightweight structure, graphene has potential for many applications in electronics, energy, the environment, and even medicine.

Now a team of Northwestern University researchers has found a way to print three-dimensional structures with graphene nanoflakes. The fast and efficient method could open up new opportunities for using graphene printed scaffolds regenerative engineering and other electronic or medical applications.

Led by Ramille Shah, assistant professor of materials science and engineering at Northwestern's McCormick School of Engineering and of surgery in the Feinberg School of Medicine, and her postdoctoral fellow Adam Jakus, the team developed a novel graphene-based ink that can be used to print large, robust 3-D structures.

"People have tried to print graphene before," Shah said. "But it's been a mostly polymer composite with graphene making up less than 20 percent of the volume."

With a volume so meager, those inks are unable to maintain many of graphene's celebrated properties. But adding higher volumes of graphene flakes to the mix in these ink systems typically results in printed structures too brittle and fragile to manipulate. Shah's ink is the best of both worlds. At 60-70 percent graphene, it preserves the material's unique properties, including its electrical conductivity. And it's flexible and robust enough to print robust macroscopic structures. The ink's secret lies in its formulation: the graphene flakes are mixed with a biocompatible elastomer and quickly evaporating solvents.

"It's a liquid ink," Shah explained. "After the ink is extruded, one of the solvents in the system evaporates right away, causing the structure to solidify nearly instantly. The presence of the other solvents and the interaction with the specific polymer binder chosen also has a significant contribution to its resulting flexibility and properties. Because it holds its shape, we are able to build larger, well-defined objects."

Supported by a Google Gift and a McCormick Research Catalyst Award, the research is described in the paper "Three-dimensional printing of high-content graphene scaffolds for electronic and biomedical applications," published in the April 2015 issue of ACS Nano. Jakus is the paper's first author. Mark Hersam, the Bette and Neison Harris Chair in Teaching Excellence, professor of materials science and engineering at McCormick, served as coauthor.

An expert in biomaterials, Shah said 3-D printed graphene scaffolds could play a role in tissue engineering and regenerative medicine as well as in electronic devices. Her team populated one of the scaffolds with stem cells to surprising results. Not only did the cells survive, they divided, proliferated, and morphed into neuron-like cells.

"That's without any additional growth factors or signaling that people usually have to use to induce differentiation into neuron-like cells," Shah said. "If we could just use a material without needing to incorporate other more expensive or complex agents, that would be ideal."

The printed graphene structure is also flexible and strong enough to be easily sutured to existing tissues, so it could be used for biodegradable sensors and medical implants. Shah said the biocompatible elastomer and graphene's electrical conductivity most likely contributed to the scaffold's biological success.

"Cells conduct electricity inherently -- especially neurons," Shah said. "So if they're on a substrate that can help conduct that signal, they're able to communicate over wider distances."

The graphene-based ink directly follows work that Shah and her graduate student Alexandra Rutz completed earlier in the year to develop more cell-compatible, water-based, printable gels. As chronicled in a paper published in the January 2015 issue of Advanced Materials, Shah's team developed 30 printable bioink formulations, all of which are compatible materials for tissues and organs. These inks can print 3-D structures that could potentially act as the starting point for more complex organs.

"There are many different tissue types, so we need many types of inks," Shah said. "We've expanded that biomaterial tool box to be able to optimize more mimetic engineered tissue constructs using 3-D printing."

INFORMATION:



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Health and social inequities drives HIV in young men who have sex with other men

2015-05-19
HIV infections continue to rise in a new generation of young, gay, bisexual and other men who have sex with men (YMSM) despite three decades of HIV prevention as well as recent availability of biomedical technologies to prevent infection. In the U.S., it is estimated that 63% of incident HIV infections in 2010 were among YMSM despite the fact that they represent a very small portion of the population. Given this heightened risk for HIV seroconversion among YMSM, researchers at New York University's Center for Health, Identity, Behavior & Prevention Studies (CHIBPS) sought ...

What makes cancer cells spread? New device offers clues

What makes cancer cells spread? New device offers clues
2015-05-19
ANN ARBOR, Mich. -- Why do some cancer cells break away from a tumor and travel to distant parts of the body? A team of oncologists and engineers from the University of Michigan teamed up to help understand this crucial question. Cancer becomes deadly when it spreads, or metastasizes. Not all cells have the same ability to travel through the body, but researchers don't understand why. In a paper published in Scientific Reports, researchers describe a new device that is able to sort cells based on their ability to move. The researchers were then able to take the sorted ...

I Sprint for Exercise: NASA's iRAT Study

I Sprint for Exercise: NASAs iRAT Study
2015-05-19
Run far or run fast? That is one of the questions NASA is trying to answer with one of its latest studies--and the answers may help keep us in shape on Earth, as well as in space. Even with regular exercise, astronauts who spend an extended period of time in space experience muscle weakening, bone loss, and decreased cardiovascular conditioning. This is because they no longer have to work against gravity in everyday living. NASA's Human Research Program Integrated Resistance and Aerobic Training study, known as iRAT, completed recently to evaluate the use of high intensity ...

A virtual twin: Can virtual drivers resembling the user increase trust in smart cars?

2015-05-19
Human error is estimated to cause more than 90% of traffic accidents, a percentage that might be drastically reduced by the implementation of self-driving cars featuring smart systems that control most aspects of driving. Although the potential benefits of self-driving cars have been widely touted, their success on the roadways of the near future is largely reliant on whether or not drivers are willing to trust these smart systems enough to hand over the wheel. A new study published in Human Factors: The Journal of the Human Factors and Ergonomics Society evaluated whether ...

Smokers don't vote: 11,626-person study shows marginalization of tobacco users

2015-05-19
A University of Colorado Cancer Center study published in the journal Nicotine & Tobacco Research shows a new dimension to the marginalization of smokers: people who smoke are less likely to vote than their non-smoking peers. "One on hand, the result is intuitive. We know from previous research that smokers are an increasingly marginalized population, involved in fewer organizations and activities and with less interpersonal trust than nonsmokers. But what our research suggests is that this marginalization may also extend beyond the interpersonal level to attitudes toward ...

Credit cards a valuable option for farmers' markets

2015-05-19
PUYALLUP, Wash. -- Farmers' markets wanting to increase purchases by customers should consider accepting more than just cash or checks as payment, according to Washington State University researchers. "Customers are willing to buy more if they have other payment options," said Karina Gallardo, a WSU associate professor and extension specialist in the School of Economic Sciences. "They may not necessarily pay more, but they'll buy more." That's one of the results of a study recently published in the International Food and Agribusiness Management Review. Gallardo and her ...

Bloom preservation

2015-05-19
If you want your cut gerberas to last longer in the vase, you could try a flower food made from acids and urea. That's the conclusion of research published in the International Journal of Postharvest Technology and Innovation. Gerbera jamesonii also known as the Transvaal daisy or African daisy, is a species native to South Africa and one of the most important commercially grown flower crops. Its large, vividly and varied blooms make it an attractive species for floral displays and a favorite in many households. Unfortunately, as with all cut flowers, "vase life" is limited ...

Diverse soil communities can help offset impacts of global warming

2015-05-19
Maintaining a healthy and diverse soil community can buffer natural ecosystems against the damaging impacts of global warming, according to a new Yale-led study. In a long-term study, researchers showed that small soil animals can limit the effects of climate change, which would otherwise stimulate the loss of carbon from the soil into the atmosphere. The study provides key new insights into how the interactions between organisms in the soil are likely to be critical for controlling the changes in carbon cycling under current and future climate scenarios. The results ...

COPD is more prevalent in poor and rural areas of the US

2015-05-19
ATS 2015, DENVER--Living in a rural area and being poor are risk factors for chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), said Sarath Raju, MD, MPH, Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland, lead author of a study presented at the 2015 American Thoracic Society International Conference. The researchers used a nationally representative sample to pinpoint COPD risk factors. "We wanted to identify the prevalence of COPD in urban and rural areas in the U.S. and determine how residence, region, poverty, race and ethnicity, and other factors influence COPD rates," ...

Smoking a significant predictor of lung cancer recurrence in survivors

2015-05-19
ATS 2015, DENVER - In 2015, an estimated 158,040 Americans are expected to die from lung cancer, making it the leading cause of cancer death in in this country. Lung cancer screening with low-dose CT scans in high risk smokers has recently been approved to help detect lung cancer in its early stages when no symptoms are noticeable. The hope is that by detecting lung cancer in the early, more treatable stages, doctors may be able to improve the outcomes of patients with lung cancer. However, in addition to screening high risk smokers, close follow-up and monitoring of ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

The key role of Galectin-3 in brain tumour development

Announcing Junevity as Tier 3 Sponsor of ARDD 2024

Climate change amplifies severity of combined wind-rain extremes over the UK and Ireland

Exeter announces new £3.4 million global funding for solutions to antifungal drug resistance

In medieval England, leprosy spread between red squirrels and people, genome evidence shows

Source of pregnancy complications from infections revealed by placenta map

Lepra in the middle ages: New insights on transmission pathways through squirrels

The Foundational Questions Institute, FQxI, appoints Pinar Emirdag to Board of Directors

Stretchable e-skin could give robots human-level touch sensitivity

Researchers collaborate with the shipping industry to cut costs, fuel consumption and greenhouse gas emissions in shipping

Towards transparent and antimicrobial surfaces for touch displays

Number of male Oxbridge students from elite schools declined significantly in the middle of the twentieth century, study shows

A cost-efficient path to a renewable energy grid for Australia

Leadership in MS Rehabilitation recognized: John DeLuca, PhD, awarded 2024 Giants of MS® Honor

High rates of hip osteoarthritis among older adults with spinal deformity

ChatGPT can be helpful for Black women’s self-education about HIV, PrEP

Research quantifies “gap” in carbon removal for first time

Study: ChatGPT displays lower concern for child development “warning signs” than physicians

Study: Childcare is unaffordable for U.S. medical residents

Study: New approach to equitable social care connects pediatric caregivers to resources without screening

Study: Rural children struggle to access hospital services

Study: Longer use of breathing device supports lung growth in preterm infants

Study: Newborn umbilical cord procedure safe for long-term neurodevelopment in children

Study: Eye ultrasounds may assist with detecting brain shunt failure in children

Study: Children with hypertension at higher long-term risk for serious heart conditions

Study: Rotavirus vaccinations in NICU pose minimal risk

Study: Long COVID symptoms in children vary by age

Study: Multicomponent intravenous lipid emulsion improves brain development in preterm infants

PAS 2024: Nemours Children’s Health researchers to present on youth mental health, vaccination, autism and respiratory illness

Lake tsunamis pose significant threat under warming climate

[Press-News.org] Printing 3-D graphene structures for tissue engineering
A new ink formulation allows for the 3-D printing of graphene structures