PEER-REVIEWED PUBLICATION

2024

Understanding the Significance of Layer Bonding in Melt Electrowriting

Lamb CD, Maitland B, et al.

Advanced Science

University of Western Australia, Nicolaus Copernicus University, Queensland University of Technology, University of Oregon, Curtin University

RESEARCH SUMMARY
This study establishes a comprehensive experimental and computational framework to quantify and control layer bonding in melt electrowriting (MEW) scaffolds. Using systematically varied processing parameters—including fiber diameter, collector distance, collector temperature, deposition delay, and print path—the authors demonstrated that layer bonding strength can vary by more than an order of magnitude and is strongly governed by polymer cooling dynamics. Small increases in fiber diameter (25 to 31 µm) or collector temperature (26 to 41 °C) drastically enhanced bond yield strength, while deposition delays caused sharp reductions due to excessive cooling. Biaxial and uniaxial testing revealed that scaffold mechanical performance is not solely dictated by geometric architecture; instead, layer bonding creates substantial variability in yield strength, stiffness, and wall height. The study further demonstrates the ability to engineer heterogeneous bond strength regions within the same scaffold and validates optical coherence tomography as a non-destructive tool to assess fused vs. unfused layers. :contentReference[oaicite:1]{index=1}

CELLSCALE INSTRUMENT USED

UniVert

Mechanical characterization of MEW scaffolds was performed using a UniVert uniaxial and biaxial testing system equipped with a 1.5 N load cell to quantify low-force layer bonding strengths. Custom mounting pins were used to hold printed scaffolds while applying controlled tensile loads in the X and Y directions. The UniVert generated force–displacement curves that enabled calculation of bond yield strength, identification of failure modes (fiber necking vs. interlayer delamination), and analysis of how collector temperature, print speed, and deposition delay influence mechanical integrity. The precise low-force measurement capability of the UniVert was essential for isolating subtle differences in layer bonding behavior across MEW parameter sets. :contentReference[oaicite:2]{index=2}
AUTHORS

Christopher D. Lamb; Brooke Maitland; Matt S. Hepburn; Tim R. Dargaville; Brendan F. Kennedy; Paul D. Dalton; Adrian Keating; Elena M. De-Juan-Pardo.

PUBLICATION DETAILS
JOURNAL

Advanced Science

YEAR

2024

INSTITUTIONS

University of Western Australia, Nicolaus Copernicus University, Queensland University of Technology, University of Oregon, Curtin University

COUNTRIES

Australia, Poland, United States

INSTRUMENT USED

UniVert

TESTING METHODS

Biaxial TestingTensile Testing

RESEARCH APPLICATIONS

3D Bioprinting & Bioink Materials TestingECM & Decellularized Matrix MechanicsMaterial Fatigue and DurabilityPolymers and Elastomers TestingScaffold Mechanical Testing

Related Publications:

Instrument Used:
Year:
Testing Method:
Research Application:
Country:

Controlling the Bioprinting Efficiency of Alginate–Gelatin by Varying Hydroxyapatite Concentrations to Fabricate Bioinks for Bone Tissue Engineering

Koutsomarkos N, Platania V, et al.

Polymers

UniVert

Compression Testing

3D Bioprinting & Bioink Materials TestingBone Tissue Engineering & MechanicsCell Laden Hydrogels

2026

Inkjet-Printed Titanium Carbide Nanoparticle-Based Flexible Bidirectional Flow Sensors for Flow-Aware Autonomous Systems

Sengupta D, Birudula S, et al.

ACS Applied Electronic Materials

UniVert

Flexural and Bending Testing

Wearable Bioelectronics

2026

A 3D Bioprinted Spheroid-Laden dECM-Enriched Osteosarcoma Model for Enhanced Drug Testing and Therapeutic Discovery

Domingues M F, Carreira M C, et al.

Advanced Healthcare Materials

UniVert

Compression Testing

3D Bioprinting & Bioink Materials TestingCancer MechanobiologyDrug Screening & Drug Delivery MechanicsHydrogel Mechanical Testing

2026

Contact Sales

Product of Interest: