eCM (Eur Cell Mater / e Cells & Materials) eCM Open Access Scientific Journal
 ISSN:1473-2262         NLM:100973416 (link)         DOI:10.22203/eCM

2011   Volume No 21 – pages 286-303

Title: Tuning electrospinning parameters for production of 3D-fiber-fleeces with increased porosity for soft tissue engineering applications

Author: V Milleret, B Simona, P Neuenschwander, H Hall

Address: ETH Zurich, Department of Materials, HCI E415, Cells and BioMaterials, Wolfgang-Pauli-Strasse 10, CH-8093 Zürich, Switzerland

E-mail: heike.hall at mat.ethz.ch

Key Words: Degrapol®, PLGA, 3D-fiber fleeces, cell infiltration, electrospinning, tissue engineering.

Publication date: March 22nd 2011

Abstract: Degrapol® and PLGA electrospun fiber fleeces were characterized with regard to fiber diameter, alignment, mechanical properties as well as scaffold porosity. The study showed that electrospinning parameters affect fiber diameter and alignment in an inverse relation: fiber diameter was increased with increased flow rate, with decrease in working distance and collector velocity, whereas fiber alignment increased with the working distance and collector velocity but decreased with increased flow rate. When Degrapol® or PLGA-polymers were co-spun with increasing ratios of a water-soluble polymer that was subsequently removed; fibrous scaffolds with increased porosities were obtained. Mechanical properties correlated with fiber alignment rather than fiber diameter as aligned fiber scaffolds demonstrated strong mechanical anisotropy. For co-spun fibers the Young’s modulus correlated inversely with the amount of co-spun polymer. Cell proliferation was independent of the porosity of the scaffold, but different between the two polymers. Furthermore, fibrous scaffolds with different porosities were analyzed for cell infiltration suggesting that cell infiltration was enhanced with increased porosity and increasing time. These experiments indicate that 3D-fiber fleeces can be produced with controlled properties, being prerequisites for successful scaffolds in tissue engineering applications.

Article download: Pages 286-303 (PDF file)
DOI: 10.22203/eCM.v021a22