Saisneha Koppaka, David Doan, Wei Cai, Wendy Gu, Sindy K. Y. Tang
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引用次数: 0
摘要
在微尺度上切割软材料在单细胞研究、用于类器官培养的组织显微切割、药物筛选和其他分析中有着新兴的应用。然而,切割过程十分复杂,人们对它的了解还很不够。此外,刀片几何形状(如刀尖半径)的精确控制一直难以实现。在这项工作中,我们使用 Nanoscribe 3D 打印机精确制造微型刀片(即长度小于 1 毫米的刀片)和刀片网格几何形状。通过这种制造方法,我们可以系统地研究刀片几何形状对石蜡(一种常见的组织包埋材料)压痕切割的影响。首先,我们打印出尖端半径在 ~100 nm 到 10 um 之间的直微型刀片。将微型刀片安装在定制的纳米压痕装置中,测量石蜡压痕切割时的切割能量。切割能量是以第一和第二个加载周期之间耗散能量的差值来测量的,随着刀尖半径的减小而减小,直到 ~357 nm 时,尽管刀尖半径进一步减小,切割能量仍然下降。其次,我们将方法扩展到以非常规配置打印的刀片,包括平行刀片结构和以方形网格排列的刀片。在测试条件下,切割能量与构成刀片结构的刀片总长度大致呈线性关系。所述实验平台可扩展用于研究其他刀片几何形状,并指导软材料的微尺度切割设计。
Characterization of 3D printed micro-blades for cutting tissue-embedding material
Cutting soft materials on the microscale has emerging applications in
single-cell studies, tissue microdissection for organoid culture, drug screens,
and other analyses. However, the cutting process is complex and remains
incompletely understood. Furthermore, precise control over blade geometries,
such as the blade tip radius, has been difficult to achieve. In this work, we
use the Nanoscribe 3D printer to precisely fabricate micro-blades (i.e., blades
<1 mm in length) and blade grid geometries. This fabrication method enables a
systematic study of the effect of blade geometry on the indentation cutting of
paraffin wax, a common tissue-embedding material. First, we print straight
micro-blades with tip radius ranging from ~100 nm to 10 um. The micro-blades
are mounted in a custom nanoindentation setup to measure the cutting energy
during indentation cutting of paraffin. Cutting energy, measured as the
difference in dissipated energy between the first and second loading cycles,
decreases as blade tip radius decreases, until ~357 nm when the cutting energy
plateaus despite further decrease in tip radius. Second, we expand our method
to blades printed in unconventional configurations, including parallel blade
structures and blades arranged in a square grid. Under the conditions tested,
the cutting energy scales approximately linearly with the total length of the
blades comprising the blade structure. The experimental platform described can
be extended to investigate other blade geometries and guide the design of
microscale cutting of soft materials.