Effect of stereolithography 3D printing on the properties of PEGDMA hydrogels.
Abstract
Stereolithography (SLA)-based 3D printing has proven to have several advantages over
traditional fabrication techniques as it allows for the control of hydrogel synthesis at a very high
resolution, making possible the creation of tissue-engineered devices with microarchitecture similar
to the tissues they are replacing. Much of the previous work in hydrogels for tissue engineering
applications have utilised the ultraviolet (UV) chamber bulk photopolymerisation method for
preparing test specimens. Therefore, it is essential to directly compare SLA 3D printing to this more
traditional approach to elucidate the differences in hydrogels prepared by each fabrication method.
Polyethyleneglycol dimethacrylate (PEGDMA) is an ideally suited material for a comparative study
of the impact that SLA fabrication has on performance, as the properties of traditional UV chambercured hydrogels have been extensively characterised. The present study was conducted to compare
the material properties of PEGDMA hydrogels prepared using UV chamber photopolymerisation
and SLA 3D printing. From the subsequent testing, SLA-fabricated hydrogels were shown to
maintain similar thermal and chemical performance to UV chamber-cured hydrogels but had a
higher compressive strength and tensile stiffness, as well as increased hydrophilicity. These
differences are attributed to the increased exposure to UV light SLA samples received compared to traditionally UV chamber-cured samples.
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