Zobrazeno 1 - 7
of 7
pro vyhledávání: '"Rüdiger Landers"'
Publikováno v:
Journal of Polymer Science Part A: Polymer Chemistry. 42:624-638
Two important rapid-prototyping technologies (3D Printing and 3D Bioplotting) were compared with respect to the computer-aided design and free-form fabrication of biodegradable polyurethane scaffolds meeting the demands of tissue-engineering applicat
Publikováno v:
Journal of Materials Science. 37:3107-3116
Scaffolds are of great importance for tissue engineering because they enable the production of functional living implants out of cells obtained from cell culture. These scaffolds require individual external shape and well defined internal structure w
Publikováno v:
Biomacromolecules. 3:17-26
Among the starches the granules from amaranth starch (a. hypochondriacus, amylopectin type) are singular because of their extremely small size of 1-3 microm and high uniformity. However, large spherical particles of 30-80 microm in diameter were obse
Publikováno v:
Journal of Applied Polymer Science. 81:1972-1984
Biodegradable polycaprolactone (PCL) was melt-compounded in a Werner & Pfleiderer twin-screw extruder (ZSK25) together with wood flour (WF) and lignin with maleic anhydride-grafted polycaprolactone (PCL-g-MA) used as a compatibilizer. The grafting of
Autor:
Rolf Mülhaupt, Rüdiger Landers
Publikováno v:
Macromolecular Materials and Engineering. 282:17-21
Computer-assisted design and image processing were combined with computer-guided one and two-component air-driven 3D dispensing of hotmelts, solutions, pastes, dispersions of polymers as well as monomers and reactive oligomers to produce solid object
Publikováno v:
Cells, tissues, organs. 182(2)
Different cell- and biomaterial-based tissue engineering techniques are under investigation to restore damaged tissue. Strategies that use chondrogenic cells or tissues in combination with bioresorbable delivery materials are considered to be suitabl
Publikováno v:
Biomaterials. 23(23)
In the year 2000 a new rapid prototyping (RP) technology was developed at the Freiburg Materials Research Center to meet the demands for desktop fabrication of scaffolds useful in tissue engineering. A key feature of this RP technology is the three-d