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Micro/nanoscale electrohydrodynamic printing: from 2D to 3D

Electrohydrodynamic printing (EHDP), based on the electrohydrodynamically induced flow of materials, enables the production of micro/nanoscale fibers or droplets and has recently attracted extensive interest to fabricate user-specific patterns in a controlled and high-efficiency manner. However, mos...

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Published in:Nanoscale 2016-08, Vol.8 (34), p.15376-15388
Main Authors: Zhang, Bing, He, Jiankang, Li, Xiao, Xu, Fangyuan, Li, Dichen
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Language:English
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cited_by cdi_FETCH-LOGICAL-c420t-74aee073a882af3c0cfcf3a14d252818cefd01d4ebeed510ac4009db807a6aa33
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creator Zhang, Bing
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description Electrohydrodynamic printing (EHDP), based on the electrohydrodynamically induced flow of materials, enables the production of micro/nanoscale fibers or droplets and has recently attracted extensive interest to fabricate user-specific patterns in a controlled and high-efficiency manner. However, most of the existing EHDP techniques can only print two-dimensional (2D) micropatterns which cannot meet the increasing demands for the direct fabrication of three-dimensional (3D) microdevices. The integration of EHDP techniques with the layer-by-layer stacking principle of additive manufacturing has emerged as a promising solution to this limitation. Here we present a state-of-the-art review on the translation of 2D EHDP technique into a viable micro/nanoscale 3D printing strategy. The working principle, essential components as well as critical process parameters for EHDP are discussed. We highlight recent explorations on both solution-based and melt-based 3D EHDP techniques in cone-jet and microdripping modes for the fabrication of multimaterial structures, microelectronics and biological constructs. Finally, we discuss the major challenges as well as possible solutions with regard to translating the 3D EHDP process into a real micro/nanoscale additive manufacturing strategy for the freeform fabrication of 3D structures. Electrohydrodynamic printing has emerged as a promising additive manufacturing strategy to fabricate high-aspect-ratio micro/nanoscale structures.
doi_str_mv 10.1039/c6nr04106j
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source Royal Society of Chemistry:Jisc Collections:Royal Society of Chemistry Read and Publish 2022-2024 (reading list)
subjects Additives
Droplets
Electrohydrodynamics
Nanostructure
Printing
Stacking
Strategy
Two dimensional
title Micro/nanoscale electrohydrodynamic printing: from 2D to 3D
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