PEER-REVIEWED PUBLICATION

2024

3D printing of plant-based fat inks towards manufacturing complex cellular agriculture products with fatty structures

Schüler K, Marques DMC, et al.

Food Hydrocolloids

Universidade de Lisboa

RESEARCH SUMMARY
This study developed fully vegan, edible fat-based inks intended for extrusion 3D printing of structured foods and cellular agriculture constructs containing fatty domains. Emulsion-gel inks were formulated using vegetable oils (sunflower, rapeseed, olive) with soy protein isolate (emulsifier) and κ-carrageenan (thermoreversible gelation), and compared against oleogel variants incorporating carnauba wax as a vegan structurant. Across formulations, inks were tuned to print at low temperatures (~<40°C) and moderate pneumatic pressures (4–20 psi) while maintaining shape fidelity. Mechanical characterization showed compression moduli in the range of ~60–120 kPa for baseline formulations, comparable to adipose tissue and in the order of raw salmon fillet; omega-3-enriched variants increased modulus (reported ~110–180 kPa). Printability metrics (mesh printability factor ~1) and multilayer tower builds (up to 25 layers) demonstrated good geometric fidelity, with stability dependent on storage environment (PBS vs air) and formulation (oil vs wax-based). Biocompatibility and adhesion assays using embryonic sea bass cells supported feasibility for hybrid cell-compatible food constructs. Sensory-relevant texture profiling (double compression) highlighted manufacturing-method effects (molded vs printed hybrids) on hardness/cohesiveness/springiness/chewiness relative to raw salmon, and the work concludes with printed multi-material seafood-like prototypes (sashimi- and shrimp-like) combining a red κ-carrageenan “muscle” ink and the fat ink.

CELLSCALE INSTRUMENT USED

UniVert

Mechanical testing of molded fat-ink structures and hybrid prototypes was performed using a CellScale UniVert compression tester equipped with a 10 N load cell. Uniaxial compression tests were run on PBS-equilibrated cylindrical samples at a displacement rate of 3 mm/min to generate stress–strain curves and estimate Young’s modulus (linear regions below 15% strain and between 20–40% strain). The UniVert was also used for texture profile analysis via a double-compression protocol (50% compression) to extract sensory-relevant parameters (e.g., hardness, cohesiveness, springiness, chewiness, resilience) for pure inks, molded hybrids, printed hybrids, and raw salmon comparator.
AUTHORS

Kristin Schüler, Diana M.C. Marques, Afonso Gusmão, Madalena Jabouille, Marco Leite, Joaquim M.S. Cabral, Paola Sanjuan-Alberte, Frederico Castelo Ferreira.

PUBLICATION DETAILS
JOURNAL

Food Hydrocolloids

YEAR

2024

INSTITUTIONS

Universidade de Lisboa

COUNTRIES

Portugal

INSTRUMENT USED

UniVert

TESTING METHODS

Compression Testing

RESEARCH APPLICATIONS

3D Bioprinting & Bioink Materials TestingPolymers and Elastomers Testing

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