AMT OCT/NOV 2021

Page 64

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ADDITIVE MANUFACTURING

Medical applications extend the limits of 3D printing It’s a safe bet that as time passes, the number of things you can additively manufacture and the ways in which you can do so will keep growing. One increasingly promising area is in the field of biofabrication. After graduating as a materials engineer in the early 2000s and spending a decade working with newer production technologies such as 3D printing in the manufacturing industry, David Forrestal sought a career change and headed back to university for a PhD in tissue engineering. He graduated with a doctorate in 2019, developing new systems and methods for seeding living cells in 3D-printed bioresorbable polymer scaffolds – culturing cells and keeping them alive so a patient’s body can use them to restore tissue.

David Forrestal, Advanced Biomedical Engineer at Herston Biofabrication Institute.

Nowadays, Forrestal is an Advanced Biomedical Engineer at Herston Biofabrication Institute, a multidisciplinary institute at Royal Brisbane and Women’s Hospital (RBWH) which officially opened in February. It focuses on 3D scanning, 3D modelling and 3D printing of medical devices, bone, cartilage and human tissue. It has programs based around orthopaedics; burns, skin & wounds; vascular & endovascular surgery; urology; cancer care; craniofacial; and anaesthesia & intensive care. “We’re an institute, but we’re directly in the health system, with Queensland Health,” explains Forrestal, who says the work is about clinical impact rather than blue sky scientific projects. “We have an affiliation with the University of Queensland, but are focused on bringing new developments in biofabrication to benefit patients directly.” Among its facilities, Herston has a tissue culture lab, mechanical workshop, scanning and visualisation equipment, and a bank of various kinds of 3D printers. Current projects range from “lowrisk, ready-to-go now work”, such as anatomic models for surgical preparation on complicated fractures, to “more futuristic regenerative medicine techniques” involving organoids (lab-grown tissue grown from stem cells that is able to perform some of the functions of a full organ, which is therefore interesting for drug development and testing.) “From 3D printed surgical models to custom surgical guides to place drill-holes,” adds Forrestal. “And custom 3D-printed devices to change the shape of a radiation beam to dose a tumour more effectively, in a more focussed way, with fewer side effects. A workflow is currently set up for that.” As with most facilities with a collection of printers, each of Herston’s machines plays a different role. While not appropriate for biocompatible devices, their continuous fibre composite printer, for example, has great potential with external devices, such as splints and prosthetics, where a patient’s body has to be held in a certain way to help restore mechanical function. “The reason it’s so good is you’ve got other techniques, but none of them really match up to the stiffness and strength you get with the Markforged, especially when you’ve got the reinforcing fibre,” Forrestal explains. “It can bridge a gap between making a much more complex, assembled device with lots of metal reinforcement or even having to go and CNC something. That’s really the niche I see for that within our organisation.” The ‘horses for courses’ nature of 3D printing –an umbrella term for an array of technology families that are each themselves quite broad – can get missed by non-users. Throughout his work, Forrestal has used 3D printing for everything from tissue regeneration research to prototyping as a product design engineer at a major plumbing company. In a quirk of his academic career, his most-cited paper is on melt extrusion 3D printing with chocolate, based on a group project for a science expo. He and a student designed a heated jacket that could accommodate large-diameter syringes, with opensource slicing software, control software and an XYZ stage.

AMT OCT/NOV 2021

“It was just a controlled way of pushing material out of a syringe in a robotically controlled pattern and then keeping it at the right temperature,” he recalls. “You could actually use that same printer as a bioprinter. You can mix in a hydrogel with live cells and you could do your bioprinting.” Since its beginnings in the 1980s, 3D printing has burgeoned, and both the number of solutions it offers and its overall market size have expanded handsomely. Even during 2020, the global industry grew 7.5% to be worth US$12.8bn. Average growth for the decade has been 27.4% annually. As for emerging additive manufacturing technologies, Forrestal says he sees great promise for volumetric 3D printing to impact his work as a bioengineer. Volumetric methods use a rotating vat of photopolymer resin, cured at many different angles by a light source. The engineering challenges are multi-faceted – including in chemistry, software and mechatronics – but the potential for highspeed jobs is vast. “That’s a really exciting development in bioprinting, because it means you can print these structures with living cells in them, and you don’t have a problem where you’re printing a whole day, while you’ve got to keep all the cells viable and fed with nutrients,” says Forrestal. “I think you’ll be seeing that 3D printing method in all sorts of different areas over the next 10 years or so.” www.markforged.com metronorth.health.qld.gov.au/herston-biofabrication-institute


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MANUFACTURING HISTORY: A look back in time

5min
pages 120-122

AMTIL FORUMS

17min
pages 110-113

Manufacturing insights for all

4min
page 96

What makes a great Operations Manager?

9min
pages 102-103

Australia manufacturers: Apathetic, too busy or just fed up?

9min
pages 106-107

Eilbeck: Smooth commissioning with Applied’s support

5min
pages 100-101

Adarsh expands with Okuma machining centre

3min
page 99

New technology in a skills shortage

3min
page 97

Major time savings with ESPRIT CAM

4min
page 98

The new cybersecurity imperative in manufacturing

6min
pages 94-95

ZYGO Nexview 650 – Large-format inspection/metrology

2min
page 93

Tool presetters: the key to boosting quality & productivity

3min
page 92

Laserline: Welding copper with a diode laser

3min
pages 86-87

COMPANY FOCUS: Marsh Alliance – Springing into action

7min
pages 84-85

All types of solutions for Alltype Engineers

5min
pages 80-81

Manufacturing in QLD? That’s surely worth a gold medal

7min
pages 82-83

Samin Sheet Metal –New Amada Ensis laser

6min
pages 78-79

ONE ON ONE: Cori Stewart

15min
pages 74-77

OMAX: The recipe for faster cutting

3min
page 73

Frontline Manufacturing –New Deratech press brake

9min
pages 70-72

Postive signs for Addeva

4min
pages 68-69

Next-gen 3D-printed catalysts propel hypersonic flight

9min
pages 65-67

Medical applications expand limits of 3D printing

4min
page 64

Why manufacturers should embrace new tooling

6min
pages 62-63

Mecaprec: Flying high with Seco

3min
page 61

AM Hub case study: Cobalt Design

6min
pages 56-57

Iscar: Beneficial modularity

6min
pages 58-60

Locally manufactured hybrid school buses

6min
pages 52-53

TRANSPORT: Driving the economy, delivering jobs

11min
pages 46-49

INDUSTRY NEWS: Current news from the Industry

33min
pages 18-31

PRODUCT NEWS: Selection of new and interesting products

20min
pages 38-45

VOICEBOX: Opinions from across the manufacturing industry

22min
pages 32-37

Bombardier: On track for efficient production

6min
pages 50-51

From the CEO

4min
pages 12-13

From the Union

4min
pages 16-17

From the Industry

4min
pages 14-15
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