Novel Processing Technique to Produce Three Dimensional Polyvinyl Alcohol/Maghemite Nanofiber Scaffold Suitable for Hard Tissues

Fabrication of three dimensional (3D) tissue engineering scaffolds, particularly for hard tissues remains a challenge. Electrospinning has been used to fabricate scaffolds made from polymeric materials which are suitable for hard tissues. The electrospun scaffolds also have structural arrangement th...

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Main Authors: Nor Hasrul Akhmal Ngadiman, Noordin Mohd Yusof, Ani Idris, Ehsan Fallahiarezoudar, Denni Kurniawan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2018-03-01
Series:Polymers
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/2073-4360/10/4/353
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spelling doaj-d0aa28c542a24f80a68b53d9245110482020-11-24T23:03:47ZengMDPI AGPolymers2073-43602018-03-0110435310.3390/polym10040353polym10040353Novel Processing Technique to Produce Three Dimensional Polyvinyl Alcohol/Maghemite Nanofiber Scaffold Suitable for Hard TissuesNor Hasrul Akhmal Ngadiman0Noordin Mohd Yusof1Ani Idris2Ehsan Fallahiarezoudar3Denni Kurniawan4Faculty of Mechanical Engineering, Universiti Teknologi Malaysia, 81310 Johor Bahru, MalaysiaFaculty of Mechanical Engineering, Universiti Teknologi Malaysia, 81310 Johor Bahru, MalaysiaFaculty of Chemical Engineering, c/o Institute of Bioproduct Development, Universiti Teknologi Malaysia, 81310 Johor Bahru, MalaysiaFaculty of Mechanical Engineering, Universiti Teknologi Malaysia, 81310 Johor Bahru, MalaysiaDepartment of Mechanical Engineering, Curtin University, 98009 Miri, MalaysiaFabrication of three dimensional (3D) tissue engineering scaffolds, particularly for hard tissues remains a challenge. Electrospinning has been used to fabricate scaffolds made from polymeric materials which are suitable for hard tissues. The electrospun scaffolds also have structural arrangement that mimics the natural extracellular matrix. However, electrospinning has a limitation in terms of scaffold layer thickness that it can fabricate. Combining electrospinning with other processes is the way forward, and in this proposed technique, the basic shape of the scaffold is obtained by a fused deposition modelling (FDM) three dimensional (3D) printing machine using the partially hydrolysed polyvinyl alcohol (PVA) as the filament material. The 3D printed PVA becomes a template to be placed inside a mould which is then filled with the fully hydrolysed PVA/maghemite (γ-Fe2O3) solution. After the content in the mould solidified, the mould is opened and the content is freeze dried and immersed in water to dissolve the template. The 3D structure made of PVA/maghemite is then layered by electrospun PVA/maghemite fibers, resulting in 3D tissue engineering scaffold made from PVA/maghemite. The morphology and mechanical properties (strength and stiffness) were analysed and in vitro tests by degradation test and cell penetration were also performed. It was revealed that internally, the 3D scaffold has milli- and microporous structures whilst externally; it has a nanoporous structure as a result of the electrospun layer. The 3D scaffold has a compressive strength of 78.7 ± 0.6 MPa and a Young’s modulus of 1.43 ± 0.82 GPa, which are within the expected range for hard tissue engineering scaffolds. Initial biocompatibility tests on cell penetration revealed that the scaffold can support growth of human fibroblast cells. Overall, the proposed processing technique which combines 3D printing process, thermal inversion phase separation (TIPS) method and electrospinning process has the potential for producing hard tissue engineering 3D scaffolds.http://www.mdpi.com/2073-4360/10/4/353electrospinning3D printingthermal inversion phase separationscaffoldpolyvinyl alcoholmaghemite
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Nor Hasrul Akhmal Ngadiman
Noordin Mohd Yusof
Ani Idris
Ehsan Fallahiarezoudar
Denni Kurniawan
spellingShingle Nor Hasrul Akhmal Ngadiman
Noordin Mohd Yusof
Ani Idris
Ehsan Fallahiarezoudar
Denni Kurniawan
Novel Processing Technique to Produce Three Dimensional Polyvinyl Alcohol/Maghemite Nanofiber Scaffold Suitable for Hard Tissues
Polymers
electrospinning
3D printing
thermal inversion phase separation
scaffold
polyvinyl alcohol
maghemite
author_facet Nor Hasrul Akhmal Ngadiman
Noordin Mohd Yusof
Ani Idris
Ehsan Fallahiarezoudar
Denni Kurniawan
author_sort Nor Hasrul Akhmal Ngadiman
title Novel Processing Technique to Produce Three Dimensional Polyvinyl Alcohol/Maghemite Nanofiber Scaffold Suitable for Hard Tissues
title_short Novel Processing Technique to Produce Three Dimensional Polyvinyl Alcohol/Maghemite Nanofiber Scaffold Suitable for Hard Tissues
title_full Novel Processing Technique to Produce Three Dimensional Polyvinyl Alcohol/Maghemite Nanofiber Scaffold Suitable for Hard Tissues
title_fullStr Novel Processing Technique to Produce Three Dimensional Polyvinyl Alcohol/Maghemite Nanofiber Scaffold Suitable for Hard Tissues
title_full_unstemmed Novel Processing Technique to Produce Three Dimensional Polyvinyl Alcohol/Maghemite Nanofiber Scaffold Suitable for Hard Tissues
title_sort novel processing technique to produce three dimensional polyvinyl alcohol/maghemite nanofiber scaffold suitable for hard tissues
publisher MDPI AG
series Polymers
issn 2073-4360
publishDate 2018-03-01
description Fabrication of three dimensional (3D) tissue engineering scaffolds, particularly for hard tissues remains a challenge. Electrospinning has been used to fabricate scaffolds made from polymeric materials which are suitable for hard tissues. The electrospun scaffolds also have structural arrangement that mimics the natural extracellular matrix. However, electrospinning has a limitation in terms of scaffold layer thickness that it can fabricate. Combining electrospinning with other processes is the way forward, and in this proposed technique, the basic shape of the scaffold is obtained by a fused deposition modelling (FDM) three dimensional (3D) printing machine using the partially hydrolysed polyvinyl alcohol (PVA) as the filament material. The 3D printed PVA becomes a template to be placed inside a mould which is then filled with the fully hydrolysed PVA/maghemite (γ-Fe2O3) solution. After the content in the mould solidified, the mould is opened and the content is freeze dried and immersed in water to dissolve the template. The 3D structure made of PVA/maghemite is then layered by electrospun PVA/maghemite fibers, resulting in 3D tissue engineering scaffold made from PVA/maghemite. The morphology and mechanical properties (strength and stiffness) were analysed and in vitro tests by degradation test and cell penetration were also performed. It was revealed that internally, the 3D scaffold has milli- and microporous structures whilst externally; it has a nanoporous structure as a result of the electrospun layer. The 3D scaffold has a compressive strength of 78.7 ± 0.6 MPa and a Young’s modulus of 1.43 ± 0.82 GPa, which are within the expected range for hard tissue engineering scaffolds. Initial biocompatibility tests on cell penetration revealed that the scaffold can support growth of human fibroblast cells. Overall, the proposed processing technique which combines 3D printing process, thermal inversion phase separation (TIPS) method and electrospinning process has the potential for producing hard tissue engineering 3D scaffolds.
topic electrospinning
3D printing
thermal inversion phase separation
scaffold
polyvinyl alcohol
maghemite
url http://www.mdpi.com/2073-4360/10/4/353
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AT ehsanfallahiarezoudar novelprocessingtechniquetoproducethreedimensionalpolyvinylalcoholmaghemitenanofiberscaffoldsuitableforhardtissues
AT dennikurniawan novelprocessingtechniquetoproducethreedimensionalpolyvinylalcoholmaghemitenanofiberscaffoldsuitableforhardtissues
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