4-D printing reversible shape changing materials with light-based grayscale patterning
September 4, 2018 by Thamarasee Jeewandara,
Reversible shape change is a highly desirable property for many biomedical applications, including mechanical actuators, soft robotics and artificial muscles. Some materials can change size or shape when irradiated with light,
triggering mechanical deformation without direct contact offering
prospects for remote control. To engineer reversible, shape changing
(RSC) structures—active materials that respond to external stimuli such
as light, heat or electric fields are used together with other nonactive
materials. Although advanced multi-material 3-D printing has enabled
the design and fabrication of RSC structures, only specific materials
can be printed, restricting broad use.
As a proof of principle, the study used a digital light processing
(DLP) printer for grayscale 4-D printing with a UV projector light
source to print a photocurable liquid resin polymer composed of
poly(ethylene glycol) diacrylate (PEGDA), butyl methacrylate (BMA),
butyl acrylate (BA), photoinitiators and photoabsorbers. The structure
of interest was first designed and sliced into pictures corresponding
to each printing layer. The designed grayscale of each picture at
different spatial positions was processed using Matlab and passed to the
UV projector for printing. The principle of material fabrication was
based on light irradiation for photoinduced hardening of the liquid
resin solution. The engineered product was a structure with diverse
crosslink densities at different spatial positions to enable reversible
shape changes. When the printed structure was immersed in a water bath, a process known as desolvation began, as small oligomers within the dissimilarly crosslinked material diffused out of the structure, allowing the printed structure to deform toward the less cured part. Based on the design of grayscale patterns, a variety of self-folding structures were formed via desolvation induced deformation.
The shape change was reversible and relatively fast in a solution of acetone; structures absorbed the solvent to swell and recover its original shape while still in solution. The recovered structure would bend again upon removal from acetone, reversing to its secondary structure in air.
In principle, the grayscale value of each pixel of the sliced image controlled the light intensity or light dose, which influenced the final conversion of the material during printing. The process was digitized for precisely controlling the grayscale pattern and the resulting construct. Newly developed materials were characterized using ATR-FTIR (attenuated total reflection-Fourier transform infra-red spectroscopy) to measure the degree of cure (DoC) of the photopolymerized sample, followed by quantifying the young's modulus to test material stiffness, photo-curation reaction kinetics and the quantification of desolvation vs. recovery.
Active structures that change shape or function reversibly in response to external stimuli have applications in aerospace engineering, medical devices and flexible electronics as shape memory polymers. Self-expanding/shrinking structures are useful as light actuators and for applications as endovascular stents. Such designs were also engineered in the study as self-expanding/shrinking materials using the grayscale 4-D printing method. The time for transformation varied between 6 minutes in acetone and 25 minutes in air. The concept was then extended from a flat surface to a cube shape using the same method, the recovery time in acetone was about 4 min and drying time in air was 8 min. Using the same concept Wu et al. also created a flower-like structure to shrink in solution and blossom in air.
The researchers additionally developed advanced auxetic structures or metamaterials (that intrinsically have a negative Poisson's ratio) combined with normal materials (positive Poisson's ratio) employing the printing technique, to engineer transformation between the two.
The grayscale 4-D printing method was developed as a proof-of-principle to provide a simple and economical technique to create active structures. The authors propose a range of potential biomedical applications for the engineered materials as composite materials in soft robotics and endovascular stents.
Explore further:
New technique uses templates to guide self-folding 3-D structures
More information:
Jiangtao Wu et al. Reversible shape change structures by grayscale pattern 4D printing, Multifunctional Materials (2018). DOI: 10.1088/2399-7532/aac322 A. Sydney Gladman et al. Biomimetic 4D printing, Nature Materials (2016). DOI: 10.1038/nmat4544
Journal reference: Nature Materials
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