Monday, December 4, 2017

3D printing bacteria to clean up toxic chemicals or make band-aids that heal | Droolin Dog dot Net

ETH Zurich researchers developed a "living ink" for 3D printers that's made from bacteria, nutrients, and a polymer gel. In a small scale demonstration, they printed a small 3D lattice of the material that cleaned up a beaker of contaminated water. From Science News: Lattices packing various types of chemical-hungry bacteria could create special water filters or help clean up oil spills. And unlike free-floating bacteria, cells locked in a 3-D grid could be plucked out of cleaned-up water and reused somewhere else…. Bacteria-filled 3-D prints could also produce bacterial cellulose — a gelatinous substance used for dressing wounds. Bacterial cellulose is typically grown in sheets, but "imagine if you have a burn on your elbow," (materials scientist Manuel) Schaffner says. "You try to wrap flat, wet tissue around this area, it's prone to detach." Swathes of cellulose grown on 3-D printed structures could precisely match the contours of specific body parts, curbing the risk of contaminants getting trapped under wrinkles in the cellulose or the material peeling off. Source: https://boingboing.net/2017/12/04/3d-printing-bacteria-to-clean.html Tags: #news, #NewsDog, #TopNews, random, Science and Shit | #Science, #LatestNews, News

Original Post: https://droolindog.net/2017/12/04/3d-printing-bacteria-to-clean-up-toxic-chemicals-or-make-band-aids-that-heal/

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