» Articles » PMID: 33683242

Capillary Forces Drive Buckling, Plastic Deformation, and Break-up of 3D Printed Beams

Overview
Journal Soft Matter
Specialties Biochemistry
Chemistry
Date 2021 Mar 8
PMID 33683242
Citations 5
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Capillary forces acting at the interfaces of soft materials lead to deformations over the scale of the elastocapillary length. When surface stresses exceed a material's yield stress, a plastocapillary effect is expected to arise, resulting in yielding and plastic deformation. Here, we explore the interfacial instabilities of 3D-printed fluid and elastic beams embedded within viscoelastic fluids and elastic solid support materials. Interfacial instabilities are driven by the immiscibility between the paired phases or their solvents. We find that the stability of an embedded structure is predicted from the balance between the yield stress of the elastic solid, τ, the apparent interfacial tension between the materials, γ', and the radius of the beam, r, such that τ > γ'/r. When the capillary forces are sufficiently large, we observe yielding and failure of the 3D printed beams. Furthermore, we observe new coiling and buckling instabilities emerging when elastic beams are embedded within viscous fluid support materials. The coiling behavior appear analogous to elastic rope coiling whereas the buckling instability follows the scaling behavior predicted from Euler-Bernoulli beam theory.

Citing Articles

Fast 3D printing of fine, continuous, and soft fibers via embedded solvent exchange.

Eom W, Hossain M, Parasramka V, Kim J, Siu R, Sanders K Nat Commun. 2025; 16(1):842.

PMID: 39833187 PMC: 11746892. DOI: 10.1038/s41467-025-55972-1.


Dissecting the Interplay Mechanism among Process Parameters toward the Biofabrication of High-Quality Shapes in Embedded Bioprinting.

Wu Y, Yang X, Gupta D, Alioglu M, Qin M, Ozbolat V Adv Funct Mater. 2024; 34(21).

PMID: 38952568 PMC: 11216718. DOI: 10.1002/adfm.202313088.


Leveraging ultra-low interfacial tension and liquid-liquid phase separation in embedded 3D bioprinting.

Duraivel S, Subramaniam V, Chisolm S, Scheutz G, Sumerlin B, Bhattacharjee T Biophys Rev (Melville). 2024; 3(3):031307.

PMID: 38505275 PMC: 10903370. DOI: 10.1063/5.0087387.


Functional PDMS Elastomers: Bulk Composites, Surface Engineering, and Precision Fabrication.

Li S, Zhang J, He J, Liu W, Wang Y, Huang Z Adv Sci (Weinh). 2023; 10(34):e2304506.

PMID: 37814364 PMC: 10700310. DOI: 10.1002/advs.202304506.


2.5D printing of a yield-stress fluid.

Colanges S, Tourvieille J, Lidon P, Leng J Sci Rep. 2023; 13(1):5155.

PMID: 36991085 PMC: 10060369. DOI: 10.1038/s41598-023-32007-7.