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JournalISSN: 2373-9878

ACS Biomaterials Science & Engineering 

American Chemical Society
About: ACS Biomaterials Science & Engineering is an academic journal published by American Chemical Society. The journal publishes majorly in the area(s): Medicine & Chemistry. It has an ISSN identifier of 2373-9878. Over the lifetime, 3622 publications have been published receiving 71313 citations. The journal is also known as: ACS biomaterials science and engineering & ACS Biomater Sci Eng.

Papers published on a yearly basis

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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The past and recent advances in biomaterial ink development and design considerations moving forward are highlighted and a brief overview of 3D printing technologies focusing on ink design parameters is also included.
Abstract: Three-dimensional (3D) printing is becoming an increasingly common technique to fabricate scaffolds and devices for tissue engineering applications. This is due to the potential of 3D printing to provide patient-specific designs, high structural complexity, rapid on-demand fabrication at a low-cost. One of the major bottlenecks that limits the widespread acceptance of 3D printing in biomanufacturing is the lack of diversity in “biomaterial inks”. Printability of a biomaterial is determined by the printing technique. Although a wide range of biomaterial inks including polymers, ceramics, hydrogels and composites have been developed, the field is still struggling with processing of these materials into self-supporting devices with tunable mechanics, degradation, and bioactivity. This review aims to highlight the past and recent advances in biomaterial ink development and design considerations moving forward. A brief overview of 3D printing technologies focusing on ink design parameters is also included.

548 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This review article focuses on the various types of materials used in biomedical implantable devices, including the polymeric materials used as substrates and for the packaging of such devices.
Abstract: In this review article, we focus on the various types of materials used in biomedical implantable devices, including the polymeric materials used as substrates and for the packaging of such devices. Polymeric materials are used because of the ease of fabrication, flexibility, and their biocompatible nature as well as their wide range of mechanical, electrical, chemical, and thermal behaviors when combined with different materials as composites. Biocompatible and biostable polymers are extensively used to package implanted devices, with the main criteria that include gas permeability and water permeability of the packaging polymer to protect the electronic circuit of the device from moisture and ions inside the human body. Polymeric materials must also have considerable tensile strength and should be able to contain the device over the envisioned lifetime of the implant. For substrates, structural properties and, at times, electrical properties would be of greater concern. Section 1 gives an introduction o...

477 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A dual-cross-linking hyaluronic acid system was studied here as a printable hydrogel ink, which encompassed both shear-thinning and self-healing behaviors via guest-host bonding, as well as covalent cross-l linking for stabilization using photopolymerization.
Abstract: The development of printable biomaterial inks is critical to the application of 3D printing in biomedicine. To print high-resolution structures with fidelity to a computer-aided design, materials used in 3D printing must be capable of being deposited on a surface and maintaining a printed structure. A dual-cross-linking hyaluronic acid system was studied here as a printable hydrogel ink, which encompassed both shear-thinning and self-healing behaviors via guest–host bonding, as well as covalent cross-linking for stabilization using photopolymerization. When either guest–host assembly or covalent cross-linking was used alone, long-term stable structures were not formed, because of network relaxation after printing or dispersion of the ink filaments prior to stabilization, respectively. The dual-cross-linking hydrogel filaments formed structures with greater than 16 layers that were stable over a month with no loss in mechanical properties and the printed filament size ranged from 100 to 500 μm, depending o...

429 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is suggested that macrophages undergo phenotypic changes dependent on molecular weight of hyaluronan that correspond to either pro-inflammatory response for low molecular weight HA or pro-resolving response for high molecular weight HAs.
Abstract: Macrophages exhibit phenotypic diversity permitting wide-ranging roles in maintaining physiologic homeostasis. Hyaluronic acid, a major glycosaminoglycan of the extracellular matrix, has been shown to have differential signaling based on its molecular weight. With this in mind, the main objective of this study was to elucidate the role of hyaluronic acid molecular weight on macrophage activation and reprogramming. Changes in macrophage activation were assessed by activation state selective marker measurement, specifically quantitative real time polymerase chain reaction, and cytokine enzyme-linked immunoassays, after macrophage treatment with differing molecular weights of hyaluronic acid under four conditions: the resting state, concurrent with classical activation, and following inflammation involving either classically or alternatively activated macrophages. Regardless of initial polarization state, low molecular weight hyaluronic acid induced a classically activated-like state, confirmed by up-regulat...

390 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results demonstrate that hydrophobic polymers with low viscosity and long cure times can be 3D printed using a hydrophilic support, expanding the range of biomaterials that can be used in additive manufacturing.
Abstract: Polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) elastomer is used in a wide range of biomaterial applications including microfluidics, cell culture substrates, flexible electronics, and medical devices. However, it has proved challenging to 3D print PDMS in complex structures due to its low elastic modulus and need for support during the printing process. Here we demonstrate the 3D printing of hydrophobic PDMS prepolymer resins within a hydrophilic Carbopol gel support via freeform reversible embedding (FRE). In the FRE printing process, the Carbopol support acts as a Bingham plastic that yields and fluidizes when the syringe tip of the 3D printer moves through it, but acts as a solid for the PDMS extruded within it. This, in combination with the immiscibility of hydrophobic PDMS in the hydrophilic Carbopol, confines the PDMS prepolymer within the support for curing times up to 72 h while maintaining dimensional stability. After printing and curing, the Carbopol support gel releases the embedded PDMS prints by using phosphat...

336 citations

Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Journal in previous years
YearPapers
2023294
2022441
2021513
2020617
2019609
2018423