(602a) Photopolymerization-Based Extrusion for Fabrication of Profiled Parts and Growing Robots | AIChE

(602a) Photopolymerization-Based Extrusion for Fabrication of Profiled Parts and Growing Robots

Authors 

Ellison, C. J. - Presenter, University of Minnesota
Hausladen, M. M., University of Minnesota
Francis, L. F., University of Minnesota
Zhao, B., University of Minnesota
Kowalewski, T. M., University of Minnesota
Kubala, M. S., University of Minnesota
Photopolymerization is widely used in additive manufacturing applications as a method for rapidly generating solid structure from a liquid resin. However, access to broader applications and higher throughputs is limited by the layer-by-layer nature and the finite build spaces of additive manufacturing processes. Therefore, we sought to expand the use of photopolymerization to a continuous fabrication technique known as extrusion. This talk will highlight the new extrusion technique, termed extrusion by self-lubricated interface photopolymerization (E-SLIP), which can continuously fabricate solid profiled polymer parts on-demand through simultaneous flow and selective photopolymerization of liquid thiol-ene monomers. We show that E-SLIP is enabled through the incorporation of poly(dimethylsiloxane)-block-poly(ethylene oxide) (PDMS-PEO) copolymer surfactant into the monomer solution, which forms a lubricant layer in-situ during extrusion. E-SLIP is capable of fabricating high-aspect ratio parts with a variety of profile geometries and with tunable mechanical properties. Moreover, E-SLIP can be exploited to produce soft robots that are capable of synthetic growth by a tip growing mechanism inspired by plants and fungi. These growing robots are able to grow at speeds of up to 12 cm/min and lengths up to 1.5 m and could execute a range of tasks, including exploration, burrowing, and traversing tortuous paths. These results establish E-SLIP as a potential platform for on-demand manufacturing, exploration, and sensing in a variety of environments.