Three-dimensional printing of mycelium hydrogels into living complex materials

Journal Article (2022)
Author(s)

Silvan Gantenbein (ETH Zürich)

Emanuele Colucci (ETH Zürich)

Julian Käch (ETH Zürich)

Etienne Trachsel (ETH Zürich)

Fergal Brian Coulter (ETH Zürich)

Patrick A. Rühs (ETH Zürich)

Kunal Masania (TU Delft - Aerospace Manufacturing Technologies, ETH Zürich)

André R. Studart (ETH Zürich)

Research Group
Aerospace Manufacturing Technologies
Copyright
© 2022 Silvan Gantenbein, Emanuele Colucci, Julian Käch, Etienne Trachsel, Fergal B. Coulter, Patrick A. Rühs, K. Masania, André R. Studart
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41563-022-01429-5
More Info
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Publication Year
2022
Language
English
Copyright
© 2022 Silvan Gantenbein, Emanuele Colucci, Julian Käch, Etienne Trachsel, Fergal B. Coulter, Patrick A. Rühs, K. Masania, André R. Studart
Research Group
Aerospace Manufacturing Technologies
Issue number
1
Volume number
22
Pages (from-to)
128-134
Reuse Rights

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Abstract

Biological living materials, such as animal bones and plant stems, are able to self-heal, regenerate, adapt and make decisions under environmental pressures. Despite recent successful efforts to imbue synthetic materials with some of these remarkable functionalities, many emerging properties of complex adaptive systems found in biology remain unexplored in engineered living materials. Here, we describe a three-dimensional printing approach that harnesses the emerging properties of fungal mycelia to create living complex materials that self-repair, regenerate and adapt to the environment while fulfilling an engineering function. Hydrogels loaded with the fungus Ganoderma lucidum are three-dimensionally printed into lattice architectures to enable mycelial growth in a balanced exploration and exploitation pattern that simultaneously promotes colonization of the gel and bridging of air gaps. To illustrate the potential of such mycelium-based living complex materials, we three-dimensionally print a robotic skin that is mechanically robust, self-cleaning and able to autonomously regenerate after damage.

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