The Impact of Including Carbonyl Iron Particles on the Melt Electrowriting Process

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Abstract

Melt electrowriting, a high-resolution additive manufacturing technique, is used in this study to process a magnetic polymer-based blend for the first time. Carbonyl iron (CI) particles homogenously distribute into poly(vinylidene fluoride) (PVDF) melts to result in well-defined, highly porous structures or scaffolds comprised of fibers ranging from 30 to 50 µm in diameter. This study observes that CI particle incorporation is possible up to 30 wt% without nozzle clogging, albeit that the highest concentration results in heterogeneous fiber morphologies. In contrast, the direct writing of homogeneous PVDF fibers with up to 15 wt% CI is possible. The fibers can be readily displaced using magnets at concentrations of 1 wt% and above. Combined with good viability of L929 CC1 cells using Live/Dead imaging on scaffolds for all CI concentrations indicates that these formulations have potential for the usage in stimuli-responsive applications such as 4D printing.

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Kade, J. C., Bakirci, E., Tandon, B., Gorgol, D., Mrlik, M., Luxenhofer, R., & Dalton, P. D. (2022). The Impact of Including Carbonyl Iron Particles on the Melt Electrowriting Process. Macromolecular Materials and Engineering, 307(12). https://doi.org/10.1002/mame.202200478

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