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Additive manufacturing and characterization of mathematically designed bone scaffolds based on triply periodic minimal surface lattices

Bengi Yılmaz

2023Mechanics of Advanced Materials and Structures17 citationsDOI

Abstract

Lattice structures are widely employed in bone scaffolds to obtain high porosity with interconnected pores and high surface area-to-volume and strength-to-weight ratios. Here, 21 lattice-based scaffold architectures were modeled using implicit functions and additively manufactured using epoxidized soybean oil-based resin. The porosity of the scaffolds ranged from 53.42% ± 1.16% to 98.28% ± 0.75%. Scaffolds with the lowest overall porosity (Group 1) exhibited the highest compressive strength. The compressive strength of eighteen different three-dimensional scaffold designs was compatible with that of human trabecular bone. The results and methodology presented here can facilitate the mathematical design of complex porous scaffolds for bone tissue engineering.

Topics & Concepts

PorosityScaffoldMaterials scienceCompressive strengthComposite materialBiomedical engineeringTrabecular boneMinimal surfaceTissue engineeringCharacterization (materials science)NanotechnologyMathematicsGeometryEngineeringMedicineEndocrinologyOsteoporosisCellular and Composite StructuresBone Tissue Engineering MaterialsAdditive Manufacturing and 3D Printing Technologies
Additive manufacturing and characterization of mathematically designed bone scaffolds based on triply periodic minimal surface lattices | Litcius