Close Menu
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    SciTechDaily
    • Biology
    • Chemistry
    • Earth
    • Health
    • Physics
    • Science
    • Space
    • Technology
    Facebook X (Twitter) Pinterest YouTube RSS
    SciTechDaily
    Home»Technology»3D-Printed Nozzle System Builds Better Nanofibers
    Technology

    3D-Printed Nozzle System Builds Better Nanofibers

    By Larry Hardesty, Massachusetts Institute of TechnologyNovember 1, 2017No Comments5 Mins Read
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest Telegram LinkedIn WhatsApp Email Reddit
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Telegram Email Reddit
    New 3D-Printed Device Builds Better Nanofibers
    A 3D-printed manufacturing device can extrude fibers that are only 75 nanometers in diameter, or one-thousandth the width of a human hair. Image: Luis Fernando Velásquez-García

    In a newly published paper, MIT researchers describe a new device for producing nanofiber meshes, which matches the production rate and power efficiency of its best-performing predecessor — but significantly reduces variation in the fibers’ diameters.

    Meshes made from fibers with nanometer-scale diameters have a wide range of potential applications, including tissue engineering, water filtration, solar cells, and even body armor. But their commercialization has been hampered by inefficient manufacturing techniques.

    But whereas the predecessor device, from the same MIT group, was etched into silicon through a complex process that required an airlocked “clean room,” the new device was built using a $3,500 commercial 3-D printer. The work thus points toward nanofiber manufacture that is not only more reliable but also much cheaper.

    The new device consists of an array of small nozzles through which a fluid containing particles of a polymer are pumped. As such, it is what’s known as a microfluidic device.

    “My personal opinion is that in the next few years, nobody is going to be doing microfluidics in the clean room,” says Luis Fernando Velásquez-García, a principal research scientist in MIT’s Microsystems Technology Laboratories and senior author on the new paper. “There’s no reason to do so. 3-D printing is a technology that can do it so much better — with better choice of materials, with the possibility to really make the structure that you would like to make. When you go to the clean room, many times you sacrifice the geometry you want to make. And the second problem is that it is incredibly expensive.”

    Velásquez-García is joined on the paper by two postdocs in his group, Erika García-López and Daniel Olvera-Trejo. Both received their PhDs from Tecnológico de Monterrey in Mexico and worked with Velásquez-García through MIT and Tecnológico de Monterrey’s nanotech research partnership.

    Hollowed out

    Nanofibers are useful for any application that benefits from a high ratio of surface area to volume — such as solar cells, which try to maximize exposure to sunlight, or fuel cell electrodes, which catalyze reactions at their surfaces. Nanofibers can also yield materials that are permeable only at very small scales, such as water filters, or that are remarkably tough for their weight, such as body armor.

    Most such applications depend on fibers with regular diameters. “The performance of the fibers strongly depends on their diameter,” Velásquez-García says. “If you have a significant spread, what that really means is that only a few percent are really working. Example: You have a filter, and the filter has pores between 50 nanometers and 1 micron. That’s really a 1-micron filter.”

    Because the group’s earlier device was etched in silicon, it was “externally fed,” meaning that an electric field drew a polymer solution up the sides of the individual emitters. The fluid flow was regulated by rectangular columns etched into the sides of the emitters, but it was still erratic enough to yield fibers of irregular diameter.

    The new emitters, by contrast, are “internally fed”: They have holes bored through them, and hydraulic pressure pushes fluid into the bores until they’re filled. Only then does an electric field draw the fluid out into tiny fibers.

    Beneath the emitters, the channels that feed the bores are wrapped into coils, and they gradually taper along their length. That taper is key to regulating the diameter of the nanofibers, and it would be virtually impossible to achieve with clean-room microfabrication techniques. “Microfabrication is really meant to make straight cuts,” Velásquez-García says.

    Fast iteration

    In the new device, the nozzles are arranged into two rows, which are slightly offset from each other. That’s because the device was engineered to demonstrate aligned nanofibers — nanofibers that preserve their relative position as they’re collected by a rotating drum. Aligned nanofibers are particularly useful in some applications, such as tissue scaffolding. For applications in which unaligned fibers are adequate, the nozzles could be arranged in a grid, increasing the output rate.

    Besides cost and design flexibility, Velásquez-García says, another advantage of 3-D printing is the ability to rapidly test and revise designs. With his group’s microfabricated devices, he says, it typically takes two years to go from theoretical modeling to a published paper, and in the interim, he and his colleagues might be able to test two or three variations on their basic design. With the new device, he says, the process took closer to a year, and they were able to test 70 iterations of the design.

    “A way to deterministically engineer the position and size of electrospun fibers allows you to start to think about being able to control mechanical properties of materials that are made from these fibers. It allows you to think about preferential cell growth along particular directions in the fibers — lots of good potential opportunities there,” says Mark Allen, the Alfred Fitler Moore Professor at the University of Pennsylvania, with joint appointments in electrical and systems engineering and mechanical engineering and applied mechanics. “I anticipate that somebody’s going to take this technology and use it in very creative ways. If you have the need for this type of deterministically engineered fiber network, I think it’s a very elegant way to achieve that goal.”

    Reference: “3D printed multiplexed electrospinning sources for large-scale production of aligned nanofiber mats with small diameter spread” by Erika García-López1,2, Daniel Olvera-Trejo1 and Luis F Velásquez-García, 18 September 2017, Nanotechnology.
    DOI:10.1088/1361-6528/aa86cc

    Never miss a breakthrough: Join the SciTechDaily newsletter.
    Follow us on Google and Google News.

    3d MIT Nanoscience Nanotechnology
    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Email Reddit

    Related Articles

    New 2D Materials Exhibit Exotic Quantum Properties

    New Nanoparticles Simultaneously Perform MRI and Fluorescent Imaging

    New Method to Control Nanoparticles with Light and Magnets

    New Technology Enables Fast and Cheap Nanomanufacturing

    Crumpled Graphene Forms Stretchable Supercapacitors to Power Flexible Electronic Devices

    LLNL Engineers Create New Microscale Energy Absorbing Material

    RNA-Carrying Nanoparticles Deliver siRNA to Endothelial Cells with High Efficiency

    Newly Designed Nanoparticles Can Deliver Three Cancer Drugs at a Time

    All-Carbon Photovoltaic Cell to Harness Infrared Light

    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • Pinterest
    • YouTube

    Don't Miss a Discovery

    Subscribe for the Latest in Science & Tech!

    Trending News

    Millions of People Have Osteopenia Without Realizing It – Here’s What You Need To Know

    Researchers Discover Boosting a Single Protein Helps the Brain Fight Alzheimer’s

    World-First Study Reveals Human Hearts Can Regenerate After a Heart Attack

    Why Your Dreams Feel So Real Sometimes and So Strange Other Times

    This Simple Home Device May Boost Brain Power in Adults Over 40

    Enormous Prehistoric Insects Puzzle Scientists

    Scientists Develop Bioengineered Chewing Gum That Could Help Fight Oral Cancer

    After 37 Years, the World’s Longest-Running Soil Warming Experiment Uncovers a Startling Climate Secret

    Follow SciTechDaily
    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • YouTube
    • Pinterest
    • Newsletter
    • RSS
    SciTech News
    • Biology News
    • Chemistry News
    • Earth News
    • Health News
    • Physics News
    • Science News
    • Space News
    • Technology News
    Recent Posts
    • Researchers Identify the Most Common Recessive Neurodevelopmental Disorder Ever Discovered
    • This Is What Makes You Irresistible to Mosquitoes
    • Shockingly Powerful Giant Octopuses Ruled the Seas 100 Million Years Ago
    • After 100 Years, Scientists Uncover Hidden Rule Governing Cosmic Rays
    • The Milky Way Has a Hidden Edge and Scientists Finally Mapped It
    Copyright © 1998 - 2026 SciTechDaily. All Rights Reserved.
    • Science News
    • About
    • Contact
    • Editorial Board
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms of Use

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.