The BioMEMS lab supervised by Dr. Karen Cheung is working on improving the single cell-printing outcome from piezoelectric inkjet devices. Using state-of-the-art techniques such as high-speed microscopy and micro-PIV, investigations into the motion of living cells during inkjet actuation revealed an undesirable phenomenon which may interfere with the cell-encapsulation process. Rheological manipulation of the cell suspension medium through the addition of a bio-compatible polysaccharide effectively mitigated any negative cell encapsulation effects producing a predictable cell dispensing outcome fitting the expected statistical distribution. The applications of the findings could lead to the development of cell printers for tissue engineering and fine-control over heterogeneous tissue structure at the interface with artificial materials.
E. Cheng, H. Yu, A. Ahmadi, and K. C. Cheung, Investigation of the hydrodynamic response of cells in drop on demand piezoelectric inkjet nozzles, Biofabrication 2016 8, 015008