The present disclosure concerns the field of three-dimensional additive laser-assisted printing and more particularly, but not exclusively, bio-printing.
Laser-assisted three-dimensional additive printing consists of projecting particles toward a target by a jet produced by the local vaporization of a substrate providing kinetic energy to a transferable particle or aggregate of particles contained in a carrier fluid.
Transferable particles can come from a powdery material carried on a liquid substrate, or a liquid transferable material.
They can be metallic or inorganic compounds, polymers or biomaterials.
They can also be made up of biological particles, for example, living cells.
The present disclosure concerns the field of laser bio-printing by a computer-assisted transfer process for modelling and assembling living and optionally non-living materials with a prescribed 2D or 3D organization in order to produce bioengineered structures for use in regenerative medicine, pharmacology and cell biology studies.
Tissue engineering aims to design and develop biologically suitable alternatives to replace, restore or maintain the functions of native tissue or even an organ. An example is described in the article by Griffith, L. G., & Naughton, G., Tissue engineering—current challenges and expanding opportunities, Science, 295(5557), 1009-1014 (2002).
To overcome these limitations, the printing of biological elements, more commonly referred to as bio-printing, began to be imagined, as discussed in Klebe, R. Cytoscribing: A Method for Micropositioning Cells and the Construction of Two- and Three-Dimensional Synthetic Tissues, Experimental Cell Research, 179(2):362-373 (1988), and in Klebe, R., Thomas, C., Grant, G. Grant, A. and Gosh, P., Cytoscription: Computer controlled micropositioning of cell adhesion proteins and cells, Methods in Cell Science, 16(3):189-192 (1994).
Patent Application Publication WO2016097619 describes a method and equipment for printing with at least one ink, the method comprising a step of focusing a laser beam so as to generate a cavity in an ink film, a step of forming at least one ink droplet from a free surface of the ink film and a step of depositing the droplet onto a depositing surface of a receiving substrate, characterized in that the laser beam is oriented in the direction opposite to the gravitational force, the free surface of the film being oriented upwards toward the depositing surface placed over the ink film.
Patent Application Publication WO2014061024 describes a system for laser-induced forward transfer (LIFT) without substrate and/or with a local donor. This system includes a tank with at least one opening. An energy source is configured to deliver energy to a donor material within the reservoir. This system allows the deposition of material by laser-induced forward transfer without the need for a donor substrate. The present disclosure also covers forward transfer processes induced by laser without substrate and with a local donor.
In the solutions of the prior art providing for a blade coated with a fluid containing the particles to be transferred, as it is necessary to replace the blade after each sequence, which does not allow for good control of the characteristics of the film containing the transferable elements, in particular, the volume of the fluid, the spreading of the fluid on the surface of the blade, the homogeneity and the development over time due to drying, evaporation, evolution of living particles, etc. Thus, the main disadvantage of prior solutions concerns both a lack of reproducibility of prints and the need for frequent handling, which reduce productivity.
In solutions involving a tank or reservoir containing a fluid, it is difficult to control the generation of the jet at the air-liquid interface, as the materials to be transferred tend to settle and thus to be far from the target. These solutions therefore do not allow the transfer of particles contained in a fluid under reproducible conditions. This is a generic disadvantage also known for bio-extrusion or ink-jet solutions.
In general, previously known solutions are not suitable for an industrial process for printing liquid media containing particles, due to the difficulty of accurately targeting the particles contained in the fluid and the need to change the substrate regularly. These changes in support require manipulations, resulting in the lack of reproducibility observed.
A secondary problem that the present disclosure aims to remedy by some of its variants concerns the abandonment of the interaction of the laser with a sacrificial layer, for example, a gold coating.
For the previously known solutions that use a sacrificial layer, the jet formed by a laser exciting this layer causes the transfer of material from this layer, which can lead to problems of toxicity and projection of particles other than the particles to be transferred.
The previously known solutions also involve the local destruction of the substrate during each laser pulse, which creates inhomogeneities and requires a repeated change of the substrate.
Inhomogeneity of the bio-ink film within the meaning of this patent application means any area of the film with specific local characteristics in terms of composition: particles, biochemical species (growth factor, molecules, ions), biomaterials.
The terms “inhomogeneous zone”, “local variations in composition”, “zone of specific composition” have the same technical meaning within the meaning of this patent.
The solution consists in making the inhomogeneities of the fluid film positioned in the laser interaction zone homogeneous in thickness and volume density during the three-dimensional additive laser-assisted printing. It also consists in allowing the filling of the interaction zone in a repeated and controlled way by the fluid. Such a solution requires the implementation of a laser printing process that does not use a sacrificial layer for the generation of material jets, which effectively involves a laser-material interaction that takes place directly in the fluid. Thus, the process of generating the cavitation bubble and then the material jet will be different from the previously known techniques.
The advantages of this solution are manifold:
In addition, the present disclosure allows the use of imaging means correlated to laser pulses in order to target inhomogeneities in the fluid in a controlled manner. In order to achieve this, the interaction area must be based on a transparent material, both for the laser and for the image acquisition means.
Although this solution is compatible with laser printing based on the use of a sacrificial layer (typically a metallic layer of gold or silver), it is preferably intended for laser printing without the use of a sacrificial layer. Such a solution must therefore ensure the creation of reproducible and repeatable jets in the field during direct interaction between the laser and the fluid containing the inhomogeneities. In order to achieve this, a number of printing parameters, listed below, are necessary because jet generation is very difficult to achieve in this printing condition without a sacrificial layer:
In such a context, there is no longer any problem related to the printing of debris from the sacrificial layer to the printing substrate, thus ensuring a higher viability of the cells in the context of bio-printing.
The present disclosure concerns, in its most general sense, an additive printing equipment comprising a directable energy excitation means for producing a point interaction with a fluid covering a slide, in order to cause a jet oriented toward a target, the fluid being constituted by a liquid vector containing transferable particles or by a transferable liquid biomaterial, characterized in that:
This slide defines an area with a preferably flat bottom, positioned to allow interaction with the energy excitation beam, this area being surrounded by a border having an inlet and an outlet opening, to ensure the presence, in this interaction area with the energy excitation means, of a film that can be transiently static, deposited on the area, and at other times formed by a fluid circulation ensuring the renewal of transferable particles and displacement with respect to the energy excitation axis.
In “static” solutions, it is necessary to replace the slide after each sequence. This does not allow a good control of the characteristics of the film containing the transferable elements, in particular, the volume of the fluid, the spreading of the fluid on the surface of the slide, the homogeneity and the development over time due to the phenomena of drying, evaporation, the evolution of living particles, etc.
The slides of the prior art have a static coating of an ink, requiring the slide to be changed after each use, which does not optimize the use of transferable elements.
According to specific embodiments of the equipment according to embodiments of the present disclosure:
The present disclosure also concerns an additive printing method by an equipment including a directable energy excitation means for producing a point interaction with a fluid covering a slide, in order to cause a jet oriented toward a target, the fluid being constituted by a liquid vector containing transferable inhomogeneities (particles, or biomaterials or chemical species) or by a transferable liquid biomaterial, characterized in that the fluid forms a liquid film of a thickness of less than 500 μm circulating between an inlet duct and an outlet duct of a slide having at least one zone allowing interaction with the laser, and into which at least one inlet opens.
According to a particular variant, the energy level per pulse is controlled by a computer according to the result of the measurement of the characteristics of the fluid present in the interaction zone, the measurements including particle density, and/or viscosity, and/or film thickness.
The present disclosure will be best understood upon reading the following detailed description of a non-limiting exemplary embodiment, while referring to the appended drawings, wherein:
A slide (2) made of glass or transparent material defines a cavity (3) in which flows a carrier fluid (4) containing transferable particles (5).
The depth of this cavity is less than 500 m and preferably from 50 to 100 m thick, thus avoiding settling phenomena in the cavity (3).
This cavity (3) is formed by molding, machining, blowing (glass) or 3D printing (FDM, SLS, SLA, DLP, DMLS, EBM, CLIP, MultiJet, etc.) and has a circular, or rectangular, or oval, section, or other geometric shapes. Its transverse surface (6) defines a working area that can be scanned by the laser beam (1) and visualized on a sensor via an optical retrobeam.
The carrier fluid (4), pushed by a pumping system (15), enters the cavity (3) through an inlet (7) connected to a supply duct (8) itself connected to a supply tank (14), and is discharged via an outlet (9) to a discharge and/or exhaust duct (10).
The discharge and/or exhaust duct (10) leads to a recovery tank (13) containing the carrier fluid (4) loaded with transferable particles (5). A pumping system (15) circulates the carrier fluid (4) loaded with transferable particles (5). The supply tank (14) and the recovery tank (13) can be separated or form a single tank if the same fluid is to be recirculated in the system several times. In this configuration, the interest is to maximize the number of particles printed in the circulating fluid.
Optionally, the system includes several sets of supply tanks (14 and 13), each containing a carrier fluid loaded with inhomogeneities of different kinds. A valve is used to select one of the tanks, to allow the deposition of particles of different kinds and the formation of differentiated layers on the target (11).
The flow rate of the carrier fluid (4) is adjusted to ensure that the working area of the transferable particles (5) is moved at a speed that allows selection by appropriate means (imaging, spectroscopy, etc.) and activates those selected by a laser pulse.
The target (11) is movable in a plane X, Y parallel to the transverse surface (6) of the cavity (3) to determine the deposition point of the transferred particle (12) and optionally in a perpendicular direction, to adjust the distance travelled by the transferable particle (5) to be transferred. In this case, it is possible to modulate the size of the droplets deposited on the printing substrate.
This optical system consists of two angularly oscillating mirrors (galvanometer type) (20), allowing to scan the laser shooting area, and a first optical unit (21) consisting of a scanning lens, of F-Theta type, allowing to form a laser spot whose diameter on the working plane is the smallest and most constant possible. This first optical unit (21) is made up in a known way by a system of several lenses.
Upstream of the scanning mirrors (20), the optical system includes a laser source (22) whose beam is reflected back to the scanning mirrors (20) by a dichroic mirror (23).
A second optical unit (24) forms an image of the working area (25) using the retro-beam passing through the dichroic mirror (23), on a sensor (26).
It consists of three circuits consisting of three parallel cavities (30, 31, 32), each extending between a supply duct (33 to 35 respectively) and an exhaust duct (36 to 38 respectively).
Each circuit ensures the circulation of a carrier fluid containing transferable inhomogeneities (39 to 41) of potentially different natures. Indeed, either they are of the same nature that could allow larger fields in size to be printed or the printing process to be accelerated (gain in productivity), or they are of a different nature that could make it possible to manufacture complex and customized items (gain on the range of manufacturable items), it is the “multicolor” aspect provided by this type of architecture.
To select one of the cavities, the slide (2) can be mechanically moved in a direction perpendicular to the main axis of the three cavities, or the scanning of the laser beam can be made to cover the entire slide (2).
The combination of ducts and lamellae ensures that the fluid (4) is properly directed onto the slide (2). Images proving that thin films are possible are shown in photographs 6.j, 6.k and 6.l obtained by imaging (camera and image recovery lens) across the equipment. Depending on the pressure parameters of the fluid (4) at the inlet (7) and the suction of the fluid (4) at the outlet, it is possible to modulate the central thickness of the film. For example, thicknesses of 136 μm, 100 μm and 56 μm were obtained experimentally and are illustrated in
The monitoring of these thicknesses correlated to the adaptation of the laser excitation parameters (energy, focusing, etc.) allows the fine adjustment of the jets generated by the laser absorption. The upper shape of the film is not necessarily flat as can be seen in the photographs. This depends on the parameters of the fluid (4) (viscosity, density, flow rate . . . ) and the pressure/suction parameters of the fluid. The laser shooting area can be spatially adapted to a part of the film where the thickness is constant. This zone can also correspond to the entire cavity, but in this case, the laser parameters will be adapted to the variations in film thickness in the target field.
The characterization of the film could also be carried out by other means than the imaging mentioned here, such as spectroscopic analysis, distance measurement, line shadowgraph, etc.
The examples cited here are therefore not limiting to the architectures that the equipment according to the present disclosure could have.
The first step involves focusing the laser on the material, which in this case is the ink arranged in the form of a film (4) in the cavity (3). The way the laser is focused directly impacts the volume that will absorb the deposited energy. This is called laser fluence (energy in relation to surface or volume). As the method does not use a sacrificial layer, it is the ink and most of its liquid medium that absorbs the laser energy. In fact, the choice of laser wavelength and energy has a direct impact on the absorption capacity of the film (4).
In the case of bio-printing, the ink is essentially composed of water that has well-known absorption peaks at the spectral level. It will therefore be possible to try to maximize this absorption by choosing laser sources corresponding to these maxima (e.g., infra-red water absorption lines). It may also be possible to try to maximize absorption through absorbers placed in the ink (molecules, dyes, particles). In the examples illustrated in the present disclosure, the laser used works at 1030 nm wavelength (ytterbium) for a pulse duration covering a range from 10 picoseconds to 400 femtoseconds and energies between 1 and 40 μJoules. Preferably, a laser with a pulse duration of 10 picoseconds for an energy per pulse of 10 to 14 μJoules was used.
The second step corresponds to the creation of the plasma (81), which is the result of the dissociation of the material following the absorption of the laser beam by the film fluid (4). This plasma is made up of a mixture of atoms, ions, electrons, molecular residues, etc.
The plasma is created over extremely short times, typically a few picoseconds after laser absorption and has a very short “life time” on the order of one microsecond. The size of the plasma (81), its spatio-temporal dynamics, its “temperature”, and its components are very strongly related to the duration of the laser pulse used. If the latter is in a so-called “short” regime from the microsecond to the nanosecond, the main effects at the origin of plasma are linear absorption effects with local temperature increases on the order of one to a few degrees. It is a “thermal” process. It is considered to be more “coarse” on the quality of plasma containment in a well-controlled and small space. On the other hand, if the pulse duration is in a so-called “ultra-short”regime, i.e., corresponding to pulse durations of a few tens of picoseconds to one femtosecond, then the effects at the origin of the plasma will be a combination of linear and non-linear effects.
Moreover, the shorter the pulse duration, the more non-linear effects will be favored. The advantage of using these regimes lies in the access to so-called “athermal” processes to ensure plasma containment in a very well bounded and very small space without temperature rise. This regime is therefore more favorable to cell viability a priori as well as to high resolution. In the case of the present disclosure, the main results were obtained between 5 and 10 picoseconds, a regime that mixes both linear and non-linear effects. They demonstrated the ability to print both homogeneous and colloidal media without sacrificial layers.
The third step is to create the cavitation bubble (82) in the medium. This bubble is the result of the recombination of the plasma components into a pressurized gas. Recombination is based on many complex physical processes such as field effects, radiative and non-radiative recombinations, tunnel effects, etc. . . . . Cavitation is very strongly dependent on the size and quality of the initial plasma (81). Cavitation bubble (82) appears after about one microsecond following absorption by the laser and the creation of the plasma. It can have a spherical shape but can also have an elongated or annular shape. It all depends on the initial plasma and its shape. The polarization of the laser and the geometric distribution of its energy at the focal plane have a direct influence on the shape of the plasma and therefore on the shape of the cavitation bubble. Thus, to obtain more reproducible results, isotropic forms, such as circular laser polarization, will be preferred.
Lastly, the fourth step corresponds to the so-called hydrodynamic phase where the cavitation bubble (82) will grow, deform, cause liquid movements, etc. The different phases of these hydrodynamic phenomena are already partly known through certain theories such as those of Pearson or Wortington, etc. The final result is the creation of a material jet (83) at the free surface of the liquid. The surface tension of the liquid, the distance from the bubble to the free surface, the viscosity of the liquid are among the most influential parameters on the shape and dynamics of this jet (83).
Thus, printing without a sacrificial layer will depend on a very large number of parameters related to both the laser and the ink used. The control of the ink film by the described equipment according to the present disclosure is a means of regulating some of the possible disparities (sedimentation, drying, variable and uncontrolled thickness, . . . ) during printing. In addition, the possibilities of modulating the flow rate and thickness of the film by means of pressure and suction could make it possible to modulate the size, shape and dynamics of the jets. Thus, with such a disclosure, it becomes possible to reduce the range of laser parameters required to modulate the jets. The direct impact of such a choice would be to use a laser that is much simpler in its definition, more stable and above all much less expensive because it is less versatile.
The following
Thus,
Lastly,
The slide has a transverse groove (110, 120) on either side of this plate (100).
Each of the grooves (110, 120) communicates through a hole (111, 121) with a respective duct (112, 122) vertically passing through the slide (2) and opening into the corresponding groove respectively (110, 120).
The flow of the fluid occurs in a direction represented by the axis (105) corresponding to the longitudinal direction, between a first transverse groove (110) and a second transverse groove (120).
The first groove (110) is normally used for fluid supply, which passes through the plate (100) before flowing into the second groove (120) where the fluid is then sucked up. However, it is also possible to change the flow direction temporarily, so as to ensure an alternating flow at the surface of the plate (100).
Tubes (113, 123) are connected respectively to the hole (111, 121) for the supply and/or suction of fluid carrying the transferable particles. One of the ducts can be connected by a multi-way valve to several inlets (114 to 116) of fluids of different types. Each of these channels can work either in flow rate (such as syringe pump) or pressure
The other two edges of the plate (100), not adjacent to the grooves (110, 120), are optionally bordered by a flange (130, 140) to form a delimited fluid flow area. Similarly, the outer lateral edges of the slide are delimited by walls (150, 160).
The control of the supply and/or suction flow rate makes it possible to control the flow to ensure a homogeneous distribution of the liquid over the open part of the print head.
A first solution is to provide an inlet port and a rectangular outlet, the inlet and outlet ports being defined by the upper surface of the transverse grooves (110, 120) as shown in
The lateral edges (130, 140) ensure that the shape of the liquid meniscus in the plane containing the axis (105) can be controlled. They can be physical or chemical.
According to a particular embodiment of the present disclosure, the liquid film has a perfectly flat or thinner thickness at the edges so that the flow has a higher hydrodynamic resistance at the edges.
This solution may also include:
Another solution to alternate the nature of the fluid is to alternate between a fluid containing transferable particles and an inert liquid.
Another solution consists of a liquid discharge pipe with at least two channels.
The operation is then as follows:
This operation is repeated cyclically.
In order to better control the liquid film on the print head, sensors can be integrated.
An example of embodiment uses a confocal system to measure the thickness of the film. Another example of embodiment uses an optical detection system on the injection and discharge ducts. An advantageous development makes it possible to detect the passage of bubbles, particularly on the escape route. An advantageous development makes it possible to detect concentrations, particularly on the injection route.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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1752131 | Mar 2017 | FR | national |
This application is a national phase entry under 35 U.S.C. § 371 of International Patent Application PCT/FR2018/050536, filed Mar. 8, 2018, designating the United States of America and published as International Patent Publication WO 2018/167402 A1 on Sep. 20, 2018, which claims the benefit under Article 8 of the Patent Cooperation Treaty to French Patent Application Serial No. 1752131, filed Mar. 15, 2017.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/FR2018/050536 | 3/8/2018 | WO | 00 |