Saturday, December 23

Living 3D Printer Filament

This is more than a printing filament hack — closer to bleeding edge bio-engineering — but we can’t help but be fascinated by the prospect of 3D printing with filament that’s alive on a cellular level.

The team from MIT led by [Xuanhe Zhao] and [Timothy Lu] have programmed bacteria cells to respond to specific compounds.  To demonstrate, they printed a temporary tattoo of a tree formed of the sturdy bacteria and a hydrogel ‘ink’ loaded with nutrients, that lights up over a few hours when adhered to skin swabbed with these specific stimuli.

So far, the team has been able to produce objects as large as several centimetres, capable of being adapted into active materials when printed and integrated as wearables, displays, sensors and more.

Using a predictive model developed alongside this ‘living ink’,  designing responsive living materials where different regions of each print are able to communicate after a fashion of input and output signal luminescence is possible. Taking this to an extreme, a far future goal would to be printing ‘living’ computers.

Until then, it’s becoming possible to be a biohacker on the cheap.

[Via MIT News]


Filed under: chemistry hacks, Uncategorized

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