State of art on evaluation of three- to six-dimensional novel additive manufacturing technology for biomedical applications

被引:1
|
作者
Girija, M. [1 ]
Kumar, T. Sampath [1 ]
机构
[1] Vellore Inst Technol, Sch Mech Engn, Vellore 632014, Tamil Nadu, India
关键词
Additive manufacturing; 5D printing; 6D printing; biomedical; customized device; smart material; tissue engineering; SHAPE-MEMORY POLYMERS; DRUG-DELIVERY; POWDER BED; 4D; TISSUE; FABRICATION; STRENGTH; COMPOSITES; SIMULATION; RESECTION;
D O I
10.1177/09544089241281985
中图分类号
TH [机械、仪表工业];
学科分类号
0802 ;
摘要
Additive manufacturing has evolved over the last few decades. Three-dimensional printing is a digital manufacturing technology that provides nearly endless options for the creation of an accessible instrument for all parts of various medical practices, including tissue engineering, through meticulous optimization of material, processing, and geometry for every point in an object. Three-dimensional printing has opened up a new, faster, and safer manufacturing process, despite its incapability to fabricate complex structures and objects. Recently, novel four-dimensional printing techniques have been developed for the transformation of typical stable three-dimensional printed parts into smart objects. The limitations of three-dimensional printing could be remedied with four-dimensional printing, by applying time as the fourth dimension. Self-repairing and speedy printing are two additional benefits of this technology's by using smart materials. By adapting this technology, numerous medical domains could be profited. Four-dimensional printing does not have the ability to produce curved complicated forms. However, five-dimensional printing overcomes the flaws seems in four-dimensional printing. Five-dimensional additive manufacturing relies on the rotation of both the print bed and the extruder head. Five-dimensional printing outlasts in terms of durability than three- and four-dimensional printing. Currently, a combination of the principles of four- and five-dimensional printing into a single process is called six-dimensional printing. In six-dimensional printing, the form changes over time due to the reaction of environmental factors, which is primarily used in biomedical applications. This paper summarizes extensive research on biomaterials in the field of biomedical science and discusses the present implications of three-, four-, five-, and six-dimensional printing techniques.
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页数:22
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