‘in-air microfluidics’ tagged posts

3D Printing of Living Cells

Printing a liquid-filled foam and including living cells. Credit: Image courtesy of University of Twente

Printing a liquid-filled foam and including living cells. Credit: Image courtesy of University of Twente

Using a new technique they call ‘in-air microfluidics’, University of Twente scientists succeed in printing 3D structures with living cells. This special technique enable the fast and ‘in-flight’ production of micro building blocks that are viable and can be used for repairing damaged tissue, for example.

Microfluidics is all about manipulating tiny drops of fluid with sizes between a micrometer and a millimeter. Most often, chips with tiny fluidic channels, reactors and other components are used for this: lab-on-a-chip systems...

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