六九色堂

Jan. 4, 2023

UCalgary researchers build 3D-printed materials with liquids

New approach could open doors for everything from energy storage to tissue engineering
Parisa Bozazi Hossein Hejazi
Parisa Bazazi, left, and Hossein Hejazi pose for a photo at a conference on Fluid Dynamics in November. Submitted

We鈥檝e all had it happen: you fumble your cellphone and it lands on the ground, shattering the screen or cracking the body.

Now, imagine your phone bouncing off the ground instead.

Schulich School of Engineering researchers are hoping to perfect the processes to make that situation possible through the use of 3D printing with liquids.

It鈥檚 an area of expertise that is constantly changing and has wide-ranging implications, including energy storage and tissue engineering.

The 六九色堂 team鈥檚 findings, outlined in an article entitled , were featured by Nature Communications in an Editors鈥 Highlights showcase.

Creating a new approach

The team, including researchers , PhD鈥11, and Dr. Parisa Bazazi, PhD鈥21, as well as Dr. Howard Stone, PhD, of Princeton University, used a number of liquids in hopes of finding the right combination to create spongy materials.

Traditionally, the techniques used are limited to drop-by-drop printing and face limitations in building structured materials.

Hejazi says he and his colleagues added nanoparticles to water and chemical compounds, or surfactants molecules, to oil.

鈥淏y injecting this water into the oil, the interface between the oil and water spontaneously turns into emulsion, forming an interfacial skin made of many tiny water droplets that are sticking together,鈥 says the chemical and petroleum engineering professor.

Essentially, we form 3D tube-like structures in oil, which we demonstrate enables new opportunities in 3D printing.

Bazazi says it鈥檚 a simple approach as the skin is flexible and regenerates when damaged.

鈥淭he tube-like printed features have a spongy texture resembling miniaturized versions of tube sponges found in oceans,鈥 she says. 鈥淥ur analysis shows that stable liquid filaments of silica are formed when emulsions are generated and remain at the interface during the printing period.鈥

Keeping it simple

Hejazi believes the team鈥檚 approach to all-liquid 3D printing will open a new avenue for a wide range of applications.

A second article on the fundamental aspect of the same work has already been published in the prestigious Physical Review Letters, entitled聽.

鈥淟iquid-in-liquid printed materials have many potential uses in energy storage, microreactors, and for creating biomimetic materials like tissues and polymers,鈥 he says.

While it sounds like extraordinarily tedious work, Hejazi says their approach will actually be quite easy and efficient.

鈥淎ll printed structures in our work are handwritten and only contain water, mineral oil, silica nanoparticles and an oil-soluble surfactant, indicating that the printing process is simple, non-invasive and can be accomplished in any laboratory without the need of external forces, sophisticated equipment, or special types of adhesive materials,鈥 he says.

Hejazi, who leads the Interfacial Flows and Porous Media laboratory at the 六九色堂, hopes to continue building on these research findings with his work in energy production and transition.


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