Abstract

We present a simple but accurate algorithm to calculate the flow and shear rate profile of shear thinning fluids, as typically used in biofabrication applications, with an arbitrary viscosity-shear rate relationship in a cylindrical nozzle. By interpolating the viscosity with a set of power-law functions, we obtain a mathematically exact piecewise solution to the incompressible Navier-Stokes equation. The algorithm is validated with known solutions for a simplified Carreau-Yasuda fluid, full numerical simulations for a realistic chitosan hydrogel as well as experimental velocity profiles of alginate and chitosan solutions in a microfluidic channel. We implement the algorithm in an easy-to-use Python tool, included as Supplementary Material, to calculate the velocity and shear rate profile during the printing process, depending on the shear thinning behavior of the bioink and printing parameters such as pressure and nozzle size. We confirm that the shear stress varies in an exactly linear fashion, starting from zero at the nozzle center to the maximum shear stress at the wall, independent of the shear thinning properties of the bioink. Finally, we demonstrate how our method can be inverted to obtain rheological bioink parameters in-situ directly before or even during printing from experimentally measured flow rate versus pressure data.

Highlights

  • Biofabrication, or bioprinting, is a novel technology aimed at applying common 3D printing techniques to fabricate living tissues

  • We present an algorithm to compute the full velocity, shear rate, and viscosity profile in a printing nozzle for generalized Newtonian fluids such as shear thinning bioinks

  • The velocity profile is obtained by integrating over r, which yields

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Summary

Introduction

Biofabrication, or bioprinting, is a novel technology aimed at applying common 3D printing techniques to fabricate living tissues. In extrusion-based biofabrication, the survival and functionality of printed cells strongly depend on the hydrodynamic stresses that the cells experience during printing [1,2,3,4,5]. These stresses arise mainly from viscous shear forces in the printer nozzle and are directly related to the flow profile and the viscosity of the bioink [6,7,8,9,10,11] in which the cells are suspended.

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