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Fabrication of 3D Polycaprolactone Macrostructures by 3D Electrospinning

ACS Biomaterials Science & Engineering 2024 7 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 45 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Atchara Chinnakorn, Yanawarut Soi-Ngoen, Oratai Weeranantanapan, Phakkhananan Pakawanit, Santi Maensiri, Kriettisak Srisom, Pattanaphong Janphuang, Norbert Radacsi, Wiwat Nuansing

Summary

This paper is not about microplastics. It describes a 3D electrospinning technique for creating polycaprolactone nanofiber scaffolds used in biomedical cell culture applications. Although the study involves polymer nanofibers, these are engineered medical materials, not environmental microplastic contaminants.

Study Type In vitro

Building 3D electrospun macrostructures and monitoring the biological activities inside them are challenging. In this study, 3D fibrous polycaprolactone (PCL) macrostructures were successfully fabricated using in-house 3D electrospinning. The main factors supporting the 3D self-assembled nanofiber fabrication are the H3PO4 additives, flow rate, and initial distance. The effects of solution concentration, solvent, H3PO4 concentration, flow rate, initial distance, voltage, and nozzle speed on the 3D macrostructures were examined. The optimal conditions of 4 mL/h flow rate, 4 cm initial nozzle-collector distance, 14 kV voltage, and 1 mm/s nozzle speed provided a rapid buildup of cylinder macrostructures with 6 cm of diameter, reaching a final height of 16.18 ± 2.58 mm and a wall thickness of 3.98 ± 1.01 mm on one perimeter with uniform diameter across different sections (1.40 ± 1.10 μm average). Oxygen plasma treatment with 30-50 W for 5 min significantly improved the hydrophilicity of the PCL macrostructures, proving a suitable scaffold for in vitro cell cultures. Additionally, 3D images obtained by synchrotron radiation X-ray tomographic microscopy (SRXTM) presented cell penetration and cell growth within the scaffolds. This breakthrough in 3D electrospinning surpasses current scaffold fabrication limitations, opening new possibilities in various fields.

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